On Tuesday 15. December 2015 12.34.55 Paul Sutton wrote:
Kids ruby http://kidsruby.com/ is free software and has source code available, not sure if it is GPL 2 or 3, I think it may be.
Scratch is designed for complete beginners and ruby is a nice step up from that perhaps then python as the next step up from there.
I know that there is a certain amount of work going into Python-related projects in this area. There's Reeborg, for instance:
http://reeborg.ca/docs/en/ https://github.com/aroberge/reeborg
And the BBC Micro Bit will apparently support running Micropython:
http://micropython.org/ https://mail.python.org/pipermail/microbit/
Of course, the Micro Bit illustrates some of the problems faced when recommending technology: it's being developed in a closed project, it will only be generally available "at some point", and it might not be open hardware even after being made available for sale. (And a notorious proprietary software vendor is one of the project partners, of course.)
Maybe case studies are an interesting strategy for the flyer, although they may also seem like recommendations for those wanting a ready-to-use solution, and so caution is still required.
Paul