The $100 laptop closer to reality
Brendan
mailinglist at endosquid.com
Thu Sep 29 11:53:05 EDT 2005
On Thursday 29 September 2005 12:16 pm, Anthony Gabrielson wrote:
> On Thu, 29 Sep 2005, Brendan wrote:
> > Yes, logical if you want the dumbest kids in the world.
>
> Perhaps - but I think the students will be of the same intellegence with
> perhaps a better presentation. Done properly I will say they will be
> better educated as the pest presentations will survive. I think this is
> an evolving teaching medium - good stuff really.
Yes, ok, but this is both our opinion. Where are the facts? Where is the data
that says it is superior?
> > Why are American kids getting dumber? Instead of technology being pushed
> > into every crevice, we need some research that conclusively says where
> > it's needed, and where an actual book is better. Mostly, this is going to
> > be used for IM to other kids. Of course, some of them are going to learn
> > more with a laptop, and I guess we'll just depend on those kids making it
> > to adulthood to run the country.
>
> American kids aren't getting dumber - less is expected of them. Expect
> more of them and more will accomplish.
I am not sure where this is directed.
> I read somewhere, don't recall where that majority of the cost built in to
> a text book is wooing the professor to pick the said book. That will need
> to change. The costs drop for the publishers on this point as well as
> they don't need to buy, print, and bound paper. Tree huggers should also
> love this.
"Tree huggers"? Sensible people who like the environment?
How about producing all those laptops. You don't think that that might have a
tiny effect on that thar environment?
> > Remember, all the great achievements in nearly every subject have all
> > been achieved with actual books teaching actual students. Kepler didn't
> > have the newest Toshiba. Galileo didn't IM his buddies to tell them about
> > the bowling ball experiment and Copernicus didn't leave a .doc attachment
> > saying he wanted to posthumously publish his works.
>
> This point, not to be rude, is really short sited. What about Steven
> Hawking? He is arguably the largest source of new physics today and as
> quad parapalegic with out a doubt needs a computer. In fact I think I
> could safely argue that without a computer his acheivements could never be
> realized - at least by him. I could go on about this point but I think it
> should be understood.
This is not a "point". What does Hawking have to do with a discussion of cost
and teaching methods? If you are just argumentative by nature...Honestly,
this is not a pissing match. I am curious as to what people with informed
opinions think on this one.
> > We need more teachers that are held to higher standards while making more
> > money, teaching fewer kids, not throwing technology against the wall and
> > hoping something sticks. We *have* the solutions to the sliding scale in
> > this country and it's green, hires more teachers with horn-rimmed glasses
> > actually *sitting* with students until they get it.
>
> agree - teachers should be held to a higher plane. However tech can make
> learning more interesting and perhaps motivate students that would not
> have been motivated previously.
A higher plane?
Yes, and "tech" can turn off people too...How about teaching with monkeys? I'm
sure some kids will love that too. Nevermind that a lot of kids might find
this method...un-fufilling. The point is that you cannot just throw new
methods into the mix on a grand scale and expect everyone to go along with
it. Come with data to back up that new method.
> Your first point I feel is your stongest presented, however the Linux
> comunity is addressing these problems - what happens if the books burn?
> We need a sprinkler system...
What are you talking about? Books burn in kids backpacks? I guess I am not
following.
> Your second point will probably come true as well; however what if also in
> that same IM chat Susie helps with algebra homework. Pleasure can be
> woven into study time, just need to be careful in what amounts. Also this
> isn't techs fault as she could just as easily call and have the same
> conversation. Phones have beebeen problem for parents for many years.
I'm sorry, you just seem to be arguing to argue. This seems pointless.
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