Emoji! 💻 😁
World Emoji Day is celebrated on the 17th of July every year (why?) and so we’ve put together a ‘Can you guess the film from the emoji’ quiz and added some emoji-themed articles about computer science and the history of computing.
- An emoji film quiz
- Emoji accessibility, and a ‘text version’ of the quiz
- Computer science articles about emoji
Emoji are small digital pictures that behave like text – you can slot them easily them in sentences (you don’t have to ‘insert an image’ from a file or worry about the picture pushing the text out of the way). You can even make them bigger or smaller with the text (🎬 – compare the one in the section title below). People use them as a quick way of sharing a thought or emotion, or adding a comment like a thumbs up so they’re (sort of) a form of data representation. Even so, communication with emoji can be just as tricky, in terms of being misunderstood, just as with using words alone. Different age groups might read the same emoji and understand something quite different from it. What do you think 🙂 (‘slightly smiling face’ emoji) means? What do people older or younger than you think it means? Lots of people think it means “I’m quite happy about this” but others use it in a more sarcastic way.
1. An emoji film quiz 🎬
You can view the quiz online or download and print from Word or PDF versions. If you’re in a classroom with a projector the PowerPoint file is the one you want.
- View online as a Google Doc [Emoji quiz + text version] [Answers]
- Download as a Word document for editing or printing
[Emoji Quiz] [Text quiz (Word)] [Answers] [All as a ZIP] - Download as a PDF for printing
[Emoji Quiz] [Text quiz (PDF)] [Answers] [All as a ZIP] - Download as a PowerPoint presentation [Emoji Quiz + Answers]
More Computational Thinking Puzzles
2. Emoji accessibility, and a text version of the quiz
We’ve included a text version for blind or visually impaired people which can either be read out by someone or by a screen reader. Use the ‘Text quiz’ files in Word or PDF above.
More generally, when people share photographs and other images on social media it’s helpful if they add some information about the image to the ‘Alt Text’ (alternative text) box. This tells people who can’t easily see the image what’s in the picture. Screenreaders will also tell people what the emojis are in a tweet or text message, but if you use too many… it might sound like this 😬.
3. Computer science articles about emoji
This next article is about the history of computing and the development of the graphical icons for apps that started life being drawn on gridded paper by Susan Kare. You could print some graph / grid paper and design your own!
A copy of this post can also be found as a permanent page at https://cs4fn.blog/emoji/
Subscribe to be notified whenever we publish a new post to the CS4FN blog.
This page is funded by EPSRC on research agreement EP/W033615/1.







