top of page

CODES AND COMMUNICATION INQUIRY

Examining Historical Codes

DAY 1 ACTIVITY

15-20 Minutes

Today you will3.png
  • Examine historical codes

  • Decode a message

You will need5.png
  • Paper or notebook

  • Writing tool

THIS WEEK

ThisWeek-icon.png

We’re thinking about

the question: 

"How can we communicate with others to share our thoughts and ideas?"

Your challenge this week is to connect to someone using a “Coded Message.”

Let's Get Started!

think5.png
emoji happy-emoji-smaller.png
emoji angry.png
emoji thumbs up images.png

Do you know what these mean? 

Guess what? You just cracked a code!

EXPLORE_5.png

Many amazing codes have been used throughout history.

distance-learning-14-14.png

code:

 

a system of signals, letters, numbers, or symbols used to send messages, sometimes secretly

CLICK TO EXPAND

Culper Spy Ring Code from the American Revolution


It may be hard for us to read this writing, but in 1778 this code was used to send secret messages to George Washington during the Revolutionary War. It has 763 numbers that are code for different words, names, and places.

Culper_Ring_code.jpg
morse.jpg

CLICK TO EXPAND

Morse Code

 

This code was created to send messages by telegraph, which is a way to send sound messages far away through a wire. It uses short and long sounds (called dots and dashes) to represent letters, numbers, and punctuation. It was used more often in the 1800s and 1900s, including in World Wars I and II. It is not commonly used anymore.

binarycode.png

CLICK TO EXPAND

Binary Code

 

This is a way for computers and electronics to communicate. It is made up of two numbers: “1” and “0.” Using these numbers in different combinations, computers can talk to each other and represent data. Ever heard of a bit or a byte? A single “0” or “1” is a bit, and a group of eight “0s” and “1s” together make a byte!

DO_6.png

Your challenge this week: Connect to someone using a “Coded Message.”
 

Today, you will read some coded messages!

Use this key...

code-inquired.png

...and try to solve these codes!

codeint-1.png
codeint-2.png
distance-learning-17.png

Want to learn more about codes?

 

You can read about the pigpen cipher, which turns a tic-tac-toe board into an easy-to-use and memorable code! 

Ready for Day 2?

On day 2, you will learn about Morse code and create a first draft of your "Coded Message."

bottom of page