Philosophy
of Computing 201
This
is still not a graded class, but it is getting close. You do
not have to take notes, but you do have to write to the author
and either agree or disagree. (I prefer people to disagree,
I can't learn from someone who agrees with me all of the time)
You may want to take notes, particularly about some of the books
I will mention (and let me know of your choice of books, please).
1) Do we need to train our first graders through eighth graders
on the latest Internet Website building, E-mail and other 'Cyber'
tools? HELL, NO!!! That is something nice to do IF, and that
is a very big if, the school has lots of money, the kids know
how to use a library, they can multiply and divide, and they
can read a bus timetable and fill out a job application and
an income tax form. How many schools have money for new books
or enough teachers to keep the class sizes down to a reasonable
level? We look for the smallest teacher/student ratio when we
go to college, but isn't it more important in the younger grades?
Let's spend the money that we would spend on 'Technology Centers'
on books, teachers and librarians. Some school districts keep
the school libraries open for two hours a day, twice a week
because they don't have the money to pay a full time librarian.
Librarians get paid less than computer technologists. They kids
can pick up everything they need to know about technology in
the last four years of school. How many of us learned our life's
work in high school? I don't know many people who did. Are the
kids who don't learn computers in high school automatically
going to be asking if you 'want fries with that' when they graduate?
Of course not. Will they have an edge on the other kids? Yes
they will. But we need to incorporate it into the curriculum.
Give everyone a laptop and make them do their homework on it.
Make them turn their papers in on the Internet. But give them
all the same machine. Make all the kids use it, the jock and
vocational students, too. Give the kids textbooks on CDROMS.
Really incorporate into the learning. Then we can really use
them, not just have an hour a week in the 'learning labs'. If
all the kids have the same computer we don't build up a class
system of 'them and us'. We don't build up a technologic ghetto
of 'haves and have nots'. We really prepare kids for the future.
2)Will the Internet be the end of everything we know and be
the only way to shop or learn or anything else? No. The Internet
will be taking a larger and larger slice of the pie as far as
shopping goes. We have already seen what it can do to small
specialty retailers. We have watched small bookstores and cigar
stores and other specialty stores close. Most of the ones that
have closed were marginal to start with. They didn't have the
dedicated customer base that they need to withstand competition,
whether it was from another store down the block or a website
across the nation. There are bookstores that are thriving and
there are cigar stores that are expanding, but they have a niche
that they carefully exploit. And they know that tomorrow's sales
depend on today's service. I tried to buy a part for an electric
mixer. I broke the blades. Just a small part, cost less than
five bucks. I called three stores and two repair shops. No one
had it and no one was willing to order it. They all were more
than willing to sell me a new one, but no one wanted to sell
me just the blades. I went on the Internet and ordered them.
They were here in two days and cost me seven dollars total.
That was not a great loss to the local store. They won't miss
the seven bucks in that days sales. But what about the fifty
dollars when I replace the mixer? How about the two hundred
dollars when I replace my microwave oven? Will they miss the
thousand dollars when I buy a new freezer or refrigerator? The
Internet allows every home with a computer and Internet access
to have every specialty store on-line in their house. They can
also comparison shop before they come to your store. Better
know your competition, and it's not just local anymore.