Sharing Your Best Idea With Everyone
Tim Berners-Lee (born 1955) is a British computer scientist who invented the World Wide Web — and then gave it away for free so everyone could use it.
In 1989, Tim was working at CERN (a big science laboratory) and noticed a problem: scientists couldn't easily share information with each other. So Tim invented the World Wide Web — a way for computers to share pages of information across the internet.
Tim could have kept his invention secret and sold it to make himself very rich. But he didn't. He gave it to the world for free because he believed information should be available to everyone.
Thanks to Tim's generosity, anyone with a computer can access billions of web pages — including the one you're reading right now!
Berners-Lee's lesson for children: Sometimes the best thing you can do with a great idea is share it with everyone, not keep it for yourself.
Tim gave away his invention so everyone could benefit
He saw a problem (hard to share info) and invented a solution
Tim believes the web should be open and equal for everyone
His invention connects billions of people around the world
For ages 5-7, focus on Tim's generosity and sharing rather than technical web architecture. Children this age understand "sharing something you made so everyone can enjoy it".
Lesson plans, discussion guides, and activity sheets for teaching British values through real heroes.