Scratch Foundation
Kimberly Thomas-Cain is currently working as an Outreach | Learning and Engagement Manager at Scratch Foundation since February 2021. Prior to this, Kimberly was a Youth Education Consultant at Florida Studio Theatre from April 2021 to August 2021 and an Outreach and Engagement Manager at Duke University Talent Identification Program from January 2015 to January 2021. Kimberly holds a Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts and Sciences from the University of Florida and is currently pursuing a Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction with a focus on Education Technology at Florida Gulf Coast University from August 2022 to August 2024.
This person is not in any offices
Scratch Foundation
3 followers
At the Scratch Foundation, our mission is to ensure that Scratch is available for free, for everyone, so that kids around the world can express their ideas through coding. As champions of the Scratch project, we raise funds to support the project and share stories of innovation, collaboration, and learning within the global Scratch community. We focus on Scratch, the block-based programming language and online community developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten Group at the MIT Media Lab. Scratch makes it easy for young people to create their own interactive media projects -- like games, animations, and simulations -- and then share their creations with others in an active, online community. Scratch is available for free, for everyone. And that's why the Scratch Foundation is so important. Through gifts from individuals, corporations, and foundations, we raise funds to support the entire Scratch ecosystem, including development of new technologies, organization of events, and dissemination of learning resources. We were founded in 2013 as the Code-to-Learn Foundation by Mitchel Resnick, Professor of Learning Research at the MIT Media Lab, and David Siegel, Co-Founder and Co-Chairman of the investment management firm Two Sigma. Mitch and David first met as graduate students in computer science at MIT in the 1980s, and reconnected 25 years later when David's son learned to program with Scratch, developed by Mitch's research group at the MIT Media Lab. In 2015, we changed our name to the Scratch Foundation to reflect our specific focus on Scratch and its dynamic ecosystem of interacting projects (Scratch, ScratchJr, ScratchEd) and events (Scratch Day, Scratch Conference, Scratch Educator Meetups).