Teaching kids coding

5 Critical Mistakes Parents Make When Teaching Kids Coding

Teaching Kids Coding

Mistakes Parents Make When Teaching Kids Coding can seriously affect how children view technology, problem-solving, and even their own abilities. As an ICT instructor and STEM education provider at Anka Technologies, I’ve seen many well-meaning parents unintentionally discourage their child’s learning simply because they didn’t know what works best.

In this article, we’ll explore 5 critical mistakes parents often make, and more importantly, how to avoid them. Whether your child is just starting to explore Scratch or building more advanced apps, this guide will help you support them the right way.

1. Expecting Instant Results

Learning to code is like learning a new language. It takes time, patience, and practice. If your child doesn’t “get it” right away, that’s okay! Encourage progress, not perfection.
Instead: Focus on celebrating small wins like moving a sprite or making a character speak.

2. Using Tools That Are Too Advanced

Many parents jump into coding apps or languages that are too complex for beginners. This can lead to confusion and frustration early on.

Instead: Start with visual, block-based tools like Scratch. It’s made for young learners and builds confidence step by step.

3. Correcting Too Often

It’s tempting to jump in when your child makes a mistakes, But doing too much for them can stop them from learning on their own.

Instead: Let them struggle a little. Guide with questions like “What do you think went wrong?” rather than giving answers

child struggling to solve a problem

4. Forgetting the Fun

When learning feels like a chore, kids tune out. Coding should feel like play with a purpose especially at younger ages.

Instead: Let them create what excites them like games, animations, stories, or robots.

5. Skipping Real Projects

Some children lose interest because they don’t see the purpose of what they’re learning. Random exercises aren’t always meaningful.

Instead: Give them real-world mini-projects like building a quiz game, drawing art with code, or simulating a bouncing ball.

School of computing by ANKA Technologies – ICT & Coding