It's never too early to get little ones interested in computer coding with this unique series of board books! How do you explain coding to a baby? By showing how it's all around them, and how they can take part in it, of course! By using items common in a baby's world, like a teddy bear and electric train, this charming board book full of bright, colorful illustrations is the perfect introduction to coding for babies and their caregivers-and is sure to leave them wanting to learn more! Editorial Reviews 09/03/2018 In a board book addition to the Girls Who Code franchise, Horning introduces the rudimentary concepts behind coding. In illustrations with a mid-century vibe, a baby in polka-dot pajamas plays with familiar toys and objects. Horning features lines of simple code that echo the baby's activities. She employs language to tell a long-eared dog to sit, just as "Code uses letters and numbers to tell computers what to do." When she uses a remote control for her toy robot, the rosy-cheeked bot announces: "robot. Beep( )." And when the baby needs to take a nap, "Code tells the toy's computer when to sleep, too!" Horning provides a basic introduction to a complex concept. Ages up to 3. (July) - Publishers Weekly Praise for Baby Code! "This brightly colored board book introduces coding to young kids using items and activities in their every day lives. The young girl in the illustrations performs actions that will be familiar to little readers, while the simple text shows how code helps computers to do the same actions."-Vicki, BabiestoBookworms.com Praise for the Baby Code! series "When a child grows to understand coding, it just may be that they have an affinity for it because they read these books as a baby! Delightful visual and read-aloud cues introduce computer language in this 4-book series. Sandra Horning's tight text creates clear parallels between familiar baby activities and code-driven objects/toys/tools found in baby's larger world. A fine, baby peek at a complex topic, offering a shared reading experience in graphically appealing, sturdy board books." -Janet Lawler, author of If Kisses Were Colors and Fright School. "The Baby Code! books celebrate toddlers' creativity and their first steps toward understanding the technology they will command. Sandra Horning's text is full of joyful logic! Parents and grandparents will appreciate their inclusion in Baby's present as well as future. Melissa Crowton's illustrations are full of "analog" teachables too, such as shapes, numbers, animals, and nature. I love the diverse families!"-Pegi Deitz Shea, author of The Whispering Cloth: A Refugee's Story "Sandra is a writing whiz for the youngest readers, choosing the perfect words to not only create a cozy reading experience for adult and child, but to also introduce one of the many daily encounters in a baby's ever-expanding world."-Dana Meachen Rau, author of Robot, Go Bot! - From the Publisher 2018-06-25 Another book that aims to jump-start toddlers' STEM careers. Using retro-style art and coding syntax well beyond a toddler's comprehension, this board book tries to simplify the complex language of code. The pale-skinned girl clad in polka-dot onesies is certainly cute, maybe even gifted, but that doesn't mean she can understand the principles of coding. The selected real-world examples of coding are valid. Baby telling a dog what to do and code telling computers what to do are parallel constructs. The problem is that babies, no matter how much we want them to, cannot yet comprehend such abstract concepts. Girls (and boys) need real experience with the real world before they can begin to understand command language. The insertion of speech bubbles with "real code" near pictures of computerized toys ("train. Go[ ]") or tools ("repeat 3: phone. Ring[ ]") is simply clutter on the page and will not help babies who are still puzzling out the physical mechanics of the world understand how these devices work. Encouraging young girls to explore technology is certainly a worthy goal, but a board book marketed under the Girls Who Code umbrella will not do the job. To become coders, babies need to play with sequences, patterns, language, and logic--but not this book. (Board book. 1-3) - Kirkus Reviews