CODING WORLD

Coding world is a creative and logical space where people use programming languages like Scratch, Python, or Java to build software, games, apps, and robots. It develops problem-solving, critical thinking, and innovation. Coding connects technology with imagination, shaping the future in education, industries, and everyday life globally.

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Wednesday, 11 March 2026

NEP 2020 & NCF 2023 : THE EVOLUTION OF SCRATCH CODING FOR 2026-27

NEP 2020 & NCF 2023 : THE EVOLUTION OF SCRATCH CODING FOR 2026-27

In 2026, the Scratch ecosystem is focused on bridging the gap between simple block-based coding and advanced modern technology. Here are the most significant updates for Scratch and related developer platforms this year:



1. The Rollout of Scratch AI

The Scratch Foundation has officially moved into the AI space with the introduction of AI-powered extensions.

  • AI Training Blocks: New blocks allow users to train simple machine learning models directly within the editor to recognize custom images or sounds.

  • Face Sensing (Official): Previously an experimental feature in "Scratch Lab," Face Sensing is now a standard extension, allowing sprites to track nose, eye, and mouth movements via webcam.

  • Scratch AI Camp: In February 2026, a community-wide "AI Camp" was launched to help creators use these tools ethically and creatively.

2. Preparation for Scratch 4.0

While Scratch 3.0 remains the primary version, 2026 marks the final development push for Scratch 4.0, which is expected to launch late this year or in early 2027.

  • Updated Site UI: The Scratch Team is slowly replacing older "2.0-style" pages (like profiles and forums) with a modern, responsive interface to match the current editor.

  • New Rendering Engine: 4.0 is expected to feature a revamped engine for higher performance, potentially supporting 60FPS natively and improved vector rendering.

3. High-Performance Extensions (Scratch Addons)

The community-led Scratch Addons (Version 1.44.5, updated February 2026) has introduced features that many professional-level "buying" or "gaming" platforms use:

  • Debugger Mode: Includes real-time logging and step-by-step execution to help find complex bugs in your code.

  • 60FPS & Gamepad Support: You can now toggle higher frame rates and connect external controllers directly to your projects.

  • Sprite Folders: Essential for massive projects; creators can finally group sprites into folders to keep the workspace clean.

4. Competitive & Global Events

  • Scratch Olympiad 2026: The 10th International Scratch Creative Programming Olympiad begins in March 2026, focusing on "STREAM" projects for older students (15–18+).

  • Scratch National Competition: Major events in Ireland and other regions are highlighting the use of the new AI Extension as a core requirement for submissions this year.

5. Developer Updates (Buying & Business Platforms)

For those building "scratch" platforms in a business context (like e-commerce or marketplaces):

  • Salesforce Scratch Orgs (2026 Update): New "Snapshots" features allow developers to capture the exact state of a marketplace environment and replicate it instantly for testing.

  • JetBrains "Scratch Files": Popular IDEs like IntelliJ IDEA have added Interactive Mode for Kotlin, allowing you to draft and test marketplace logic instantly without creating a full project.


Comparison of Key Features


Would you like me to show you how to set up the new Face Sensing or AI blocks for a specific project?

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SCRATCH FOUNDATION MISSION

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).

PICTOBLOX MISSION

The mission of PictoBlox is to make coding, artificial intelligence, and robotics simple, fun, and accessible for learners of all ages. It aims to promote creativity, problem-solving, and hands-on learning through block-based and Python coding. PictoBlox’s mission supports STEM education, empowering students to become future innovators and technology leaders.

FUTURE FOR CODING WORDS