Asked by mani

Google offered 11-year-old Samaira Mehta a job after she finishes college. But the 5th-grader from Silicon Valley, California, had to say no. It just didn't make sense for her to work for someone else—ever. Sorry, Google.

Samaira, you see, is a computer whiz kid. She's also a business owner and a go-getter who got going at a very young age. Her dad taught her computer coding at age 6, when most kids are learning how to tell time. She learned how to use coding to create apps, websites, and software.

It turned out that Samaira is good at coding like a rabbit is good at hopping. This is fitting. Rabbits are her favorite animal! At age 8, Samaira created a board game that teaches kids how to code. She called the game Coder Bunnyz because the game has rabbit playing pieces.

Coder Bunnyz took off. It won second place in a ThinkTank Learning contest. And Cartoon Network put Samaira in a video about real-life superheroes.

Within a year, Samaira was featured in news stories around the world. Over $35,000 worth of Coder Bunnyz games sold on Amazon. And more than 300 schools and 240 libraries started using the game.

Soon, Samaira was teaching workshops about computers at big companies like Google and Microsoft.

Why is Samaira so successful at such a young age? Her mother has the answer.

"She wants to make a difference, and that is coming from the heart," she said.

Samaira wants to share what she knows with kids around the world. She and her brother, Aadit, started a program. It's called "Yes, 1 Billion Kids Can Code." The plan is to teach coding to one billion kids worldwide by 2030. Samaira believes these skills can help all kids do well in life, no matter where they're from.

Samaira raises money on her website. She uses the money to send Coder Bunnyz to schools. Then she goes to workshops to teach kids how to play.

Samaira loves what she does. And she's just getting started. She created a new board game. It's called Coder Mindz. It seems Samaira has decoded the secret of success.

Information for this story came from VOA.


Video Transcript: Young Coding Wiz

Video Credit: VOA

Question 2


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What is this Article mainly about?

A computer whiz kid and business owner
A program called "Yes, 1 Billion Kids Can Code"
A Cartoon Network video about real-life superheroes
A board game that has rabbit playing pieces

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
A computer whiz kid and business owner

Explanation: The article focuses on Samaira Mehta—her coding skills, businesses (Coder Bunnyz, Coder Mindz), workshops, and goal to teach kids—while the other options are details.