Around 2,000 primary school pupils from Fife are to take part in this year’s Virtual Coding Academy.

Designed by Fife College, with support from Fife Council’s economic development team, the academy offers pupils in P5-P7 an introduction to the fundamentals of computer programming.

With well over 1,500 registrations so far, from 20 primary schools across the region, it is anticipated that up to 2,000 pupils will take part.

The 18-week programme, now in its second year, offers pupils the opportunity to work through a range of basic programming on HTML, CSS and Python.

The HTML element of the programme brings in practical and creative exercises such as drafting text and uploading images for a webpage. On Python, pupils get the chance to learn how to programme games.

The course concludes with a secret message task, where the young people can make an encryption programme to send and receive secret messages with a friend.

The college developed the course material and set up a comprehensive library of video tutorials and resources, which allow class teachers to deliver the Academy in school.

The launch of this year’s Virtual Coding Academy coincided with National Coding Week, an annual event that prompts people to learn new digital skills or share the skills they have.

Rebecca Blyth, from Fife College, commented: “We are excited that more pupils will get the chance to develop essential skills in programming and maths through this year’s Virtual Coding Academy.

“The academy is designed to provide young learners with the ability to code using HTML, CSS and Python programming languages, all of which embeds the meta and employability skills required for our computer programmers of the future.

“The opportunity to highlight career opportunities at a young age, while engaging their imagination, is key to building their economic future.”