Ada Lovelace

Imagining Things That Don't Exist Yet

Who Was Ada Lovelace?

Ada Lovelace (1815-1852) was a British mathematician who wrote the world's first computer program — 100 years before computers even existed!

In the 1840s, Ada worked with a mathematician named Charles Babbage who designed a machine called the Analytical Engine. Most people thought it was just a fancy calculator. But Ada saw something bigger.

Ada realized the machine could do more than maths. She imagined it could create music, make art, and solve all kinds of problems. She wrote detailed instructions (what we now call a "program") for how the machine could work.

The machine was never built in Ada's lifetime, but her ideas were right. Today, we call her the world's first computer programmer.

Ada's lesson for children: Sometimes the best ideas are about imagining things that don't exist yet — and working out how they could work.

What Can Children Learn from Ada Lovelace?

Imagination

Ada saw possibilities that others couldn't see

Logical Thinking

She worked out step-by-step instructions for a machine

Breaking Barriers

In the 1800s, women weren't supposed to study maths — Ada did anyway

Seeing Potential

She saw a calculator could be a computer, 100 years early

Teaching Ada Lovelace to KS1 Children

Age-Appropriate Focus

For ages 5-7, focus on Ada's imagination and step-by-step thinking rather than complex maths. Children this age understand "giving instructions to make something happen" (like following a recipe or building LEGO).

Real-World Applications

Fun Facts for KS1

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