Episode 155

Hello World is Dead

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About this Episode

In this episode, Sean, Kelly, and Julian tackle a provocative question: is the traditional "Hello, World" first program dead? What was once a thrilling moment of agency — telling a computer to do something and watching it respond — now competes with AI assistants, voice interfaces, and tools that can build entire applications from a single prompt.

The conversation dives into the different types of learners Kelly encounters in her classroom: the students who want AI to do everything, the ones who light up when they catch AI writing unused functions, and the old-school coders who just want to write it themselves. Sean shares how he turned a massive org design challenge at work into a Python project with a SQLite database, proving that the best way to learn is still to find a real problem and solve it with code.

Kelly describes her fourth-quarter experiment to create a new "Hello, World" moment for her 8th graders using school-approved AI tools, while Julian raises the important question of whether the real challenge is just showing people that code can solve their problems in the first place. The trio also explores whether AI can strip away the administrative clutter in teaching to let educators focus on what matters: engagement, personalization, and good pedagogy.

The episode wraps with two pieces of news: the PyCon US Education Summit is confirmed for Thursday, May 14th, and Julian Sequeira is officially joining the show as a regular co-host — complete with a live, slightly fumbled first sign-off.

Key Topics

  • Why "Hello, World" no longer delivers the same dopamine hit for new learners
  • The three types of student responses to AI-assisted coding
  • Using AI to write deterministic code vs. using generative AI for repetitive tasks
  • Sean's Python + SQLite org design tool as a real-world "solve a problem with code" example
  • Kelly's classroom experiments with AI-generated Python apps for 8th graders
  • EarSketch and making music with Python as a reliable engagement tool
  • Whether AI can remove administrative clutter and let teachers focus on pedagogy
  • The concept of "desirable difficulty" in learning
  • Bridging the knowledge gap: helping non-coders see code as a problem-solving option
  • PyCon US Education Summit — May 14, 2026
  • Julian Sequeira joining as a regular co-host

Wins of the Week

Kelly: Bringing two Pine Crest colleagues to PyCon US this year — Chris and Kayla, an aspiring data scientist who is excited to dive into Python and attend the Education Summit.

Julian: His 10-year-old son scored his first basketball basket after multiple seasons of showing up, practicing, and persisting — a nothing-but-net shot that had the entire gym erupting.

Sean: Used Claude to create a comprehensive, interactive study guide from his daughter's 11-page science PDF on water quality — complete with clickable concept maps, pH level visualizations, and chain-of-events diagrams that made 7th-grade science genuinely engaging.

Announcements

  • PyCon US Education Summit — Thursday, May 14, 2026 in Pittsburgh. Kelly is chairing the summit with 150–200 seats available. Proposals are open and encouraged.
  • Julian Sequeira joins Teaching Python — After almost 8 years as a duo, Sean and Kelly have invited Julian to be a regular co-host, bringing fresh perspective, energy, and an Australian accent to the show.

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