Parent demo prep
The Day-5 last hour. Here's how to make it land.
The day before
- Save every student's project. Use the platform's save, share, export, or account workflow before students leave.
- Email parents a reminder. Include time, room, and what they'll see.
- Plan room flow. If parents rotate between siblings or classmates, budget about 5 minutes per student.
Morning checklist
- Every project opens on the right device.
- Every student has run through the part they plan to show.
- Every student has rehearsed a short explanation.
- Chairs are arranged so parents can stand or sit behind students.
- Snacks/water are ready if your site provides them.
- Sign or board: "Welcome to [Camp name] Demo".
- Code Coach has a student list and one note about each project.
- Backup plan is ready if a project will not load: screenshots, saved exports, or a coach-led walkthrough.
What each student presents
Students pick 3 favorite moments from their project. For each:
"This part is [X]. I built it by [Y]. The hardest part was [Z]."
Three short explanations usually land better than a complete walkthrough.
For older or faster students, encourage them to show one piece of code or logic:
"This is the part that controls [feature]. I changed [value or block] so it would [result]."
Parents love seeing the connection between a visible feature and the thinking behind it.
Sample student script
Print this and place it near screens if students want support:
Hi! My name is _________ and I built this project this week.
[Run or open the project]
This first part is __________.
I built it by __________.
The hardest part was __________.
My favorite feature is __________ because __________.
One thing I would add next is __________.
That's it. Any questions?
Students who finish early can also show:
- A visual theme or design choice.
- A stretch challenge or custom feature.
- A bug they fixed and how they found it.
Code Coach role during the demo
You're a backup memory and a calm guide.
- If a student freezes, prompt them: "Show your favorite part first."
- If a parent asks a hard technical question, help the student answer in plain language.
- Take photos if your site has permission.
- Note early departures and offer a short re-show before parents leave.
What the demo is NOT
- Not a tech support session for parents.
- Not a sales pitch for the next session.
- Not a full line-by-line explanation of every step.
After parents leave
- Send a thank-you email with a Creator Hub link.
- Include 2-3 group photos if you have permission.
- Save your notes for next session: common stuck points, pacing tweaks, and what worked.