On-screen text reads 'Unplugged Activity. What is computer science?'
Shot of two young girls facing the camera.
GIRL: What do you wanna be when you grow up, Olivia?
OLIVIA: Um, an astronaut.
GIRL: (Laughs)
Shot of a boy speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
WOMAN: Do you happen to know what a computer programmer is?
BOY: Ye… No.
Shot of a girl speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
GIRL: Um… Wait, what?
Shot of a girl speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
GIRL: I'm not really sure how to explain it.
Shot of a man speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
On-screen text reads 'Makinde, Pinterest engineer'.
MAKINDE: Computer programming is pretty simple. It's a set of instructions like a recipe. You have to follow them step by step to get the end result you want.
Shot of a woman speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
WOMAN: What computer science is is that it's a way to impact the world.
Shot of a man speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
MAN: It can be music videos. It can be games.
Shot of a woman speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
On-screen text reads 'Tess, Google engineer'.
TESS: Detect whether or not someone's related to someone else. You can, you know, find people's friends. You can do all sorts of other crazy things, like actually save lives.
Shot of a man speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
On-screen text reads 'Jack, created Twitter'.
JACK: You do have to have drive, I think. It is, to me, like a paintbrush.
Several Shots of people working at computers in an office. I think great programming is not all that dissimilar from great art.
Shot of a woman working with modelling software at a computer.
WOMAN: When I finally learnt a little bit of programming, that blank wall resolved into a bunch of doors.
Shot of the woman speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
On-screen text reads 'Bromlin, video game designer'.
BROMLIN: And you open them and, of course, the thing you find behind them is another hallway filled with a bunch of doors.
Shot of a boy speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
BOY: Programming is fun and easy. You can do anything your mind wants to do.
Shot of people working at computers in an office.
BROMLIN: Finally, you start to open enough doors that the light comes in.
Shot of Bromlin speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
BROMLIN: And to me, a finished program is like a structure filled with light. All the corners are illuminated.
Shot of Jack speaking to an off-screen interviewer.
JACK: The number of people that you can touch and interact with is something the world has never seen before.
Shot of a woman speaking to the camera.
On-screen text reads 'Kiki, Thinkersmith'.
KIKI: Our first lesson in the series is all about what computer science is, what a computer scientist does and you can be more responsible in your use of technology. It's a very important lesson, but it is a little text-heavy.
Shot of a girl colouring in at a desk.
KIKI: But at the end, you get to make your very own customised encoding using your initials.
Shot of Kiki speaking to the camera with a graphic showing the letters of the alphabet in binary code.
KIKI: It's a fun activity and it's very empowering because binary is one of those things that feels very technical but once you understand it, it's like you speak a secret language.
On-screen text reads 'Download the full lesson plan at learn.code.org'.