paws wrote:I don't understand how that in any way, shape, or form constitutes an argument against getting computers to kids everywhere?
Bunsen wrote:UPDATE: The MIT design team referred to in this post is basing its design not on the Apple II, but on the Nintendo Entertainment System, which used the same processor chip. We regret our error, which was originally reported by The Boston Herald article to whcih our post was linked. Thanks to David Zeiler at The Baltimore Sun for the clarification.
http://cultofmac.com/mit-designers-resu ... india/2474
I had a feeling that reporter knew sweet FA about computers.

porter wrote:So if kids use computers at an early age will they
(a) all become Nobel prize winners at extreme cleverness and solving the worlds problems in peace and harmony
(b) become spoonfed dummies with poor social skills who are incapable of critical or original thinking and have no idea on what research actually is.
Bunsen wrote:Now. Can we get back to some intelligent, constructive discussion, please?
Unknown_K wrote:If you ever programmed you know that given a task there are a number of ways of doing it. Schools seems to teach the one "good" way to do something, and all others are inferior. When a kid comes up with a novel way of doing something and a student tells him it is the wrong way you kill creativity. I also don't like the memorization followed by multiple choice tests, they just get kids to memorize and puke the answer up on command when they see it.
I don't think any such thing. Of course the circumstances are not the same, nor do I believe in recreating anything. I think this is interesting, and the street will find its own use for things, as always, and no doubt already is. The 21st century Bombay street, that is, not the 1970s upper-middle class Western suburban cul-de-sac. The well-meaning MIT team may or may not have some impact.If you think that a $12 computer is going to recreate that "golden age" of technophilia, I would assert that your idea is naive.
And yet, some do. Let the end user decide.Some of the problems out there don't call for technological solutions.
II2II wrote:Kids are treating computers like cell phones and game systems. / anyone can stick a simple programming language / downloadable off of the Internet.
Hmm.II2II wrote:Constructivism
there are a few constructivist tools out there / like Alan Kay's association with Squeak (a SmallTalk environment) and Bill Atkinson's association with HyperCard (HyperStudio is a variant on the theme, and still very much alive).
Adopting the tool, but completely failing to grasp the idea.But here's the hitch. When I've seen GSP and Fathom in use, students were always given explicit instructions on how to use it. So rather than using a constructivist approach, you are simply offering a variant on direct instruction.
Most of the teachers I've met don't understand learning. They may understand teaching, but that's not the same thing at all.As I've said before, most of the teacher's I've met simply don't understand computers. Ah well.
II2II wrote:So why are we talking about a $12 computer designed in the west?
Bunsen wrote:have a look at the real project website / ignoring all the inaccurate, lazy reporting
Most of the teachers I've met don't understand learning. They may understand teaching, but that's not the same thing at all.
I would think 486/P1 machines would be of more use then some nintendo clone, and already exist.
Unknown_K wrote:I would think 486/P1 machines would be of more use then some nintendo clone, and already exist.
Yes I'm a bigger fan of shipping existing 386 upwards machines rather than having them in the landfill and mass producing something else that isn't really needed.
porter wrote:So if kids use computers at an early age will they
(a) all become Nobel prize winners /
(b) become spoonfed dummies /
Unknown_K wrote:I don't think anybody in the US has a clue what a 3rd world nation needs for education / Did somebody have a marketing meeting on what markets were left to exploit / some 3rd world kids dying from hunger and have no electricity!
Quadraman wrote: a country with no jobs. / teach them how to grow food and sanitize water / If you want a job / you need to be an advanced user. Just knowing how to use a mouse and windows / does not help you to get a job
As Lomas told the Herald, “If you just know how to type, that can be the difference between earning $1 an hour instead of $1 a day.”
Team:
1. Jesse Austin-Breneman: ACCA, Cusco, Peru
2. Miguel Chaves dos Santos: Engenheiros Sem Fronteiras – Brasil, Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo.
3. Rev. George Fuachie: Kintampo North District, Ghana.
4. Derek Lomas: University of California, San Diego.
5. William McIver, Jr.: National Research Council of Canada and Faculty of Computer Science, University of New Brunswick.
6. Anuj Nanavati: NVIDIA Corporation, Santa Clara, California.

Bunsen wrote:Team:
1. Jesse Austin-Breneman: ACCA, Cusco, Peru
2. Miguel Chaves dos Santos: Engenheiros Sem Fronteiras – Brasil, Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo.
3. Rev. George Fuachie: Kintampo North District, Ghana.
4. Derek Lomas: University of California, San Diego.
5. William McIver, Jr.: National Research Council of Canada and Faculty of Computer Science, University of New Brunswick.
6. Anuj Nanavati: NVIDIA Corporation, Santa Clara, California.
Yes, just another bunch of ignorant, greedy American capitalists looking to grease their palms
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