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Computer underground Digest Wed Dec 3, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 89
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #9.89 (Wed, Dec 3, 1997)
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File 1--Censorware Summit agenda (December 1-3)
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File 2--"Halting the Hacker" by Pipkin
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File 3--No Blocking in Canadian Libraries (fwd)
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File 4--NETFUTURE--something new (Net & Education)
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File 5--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 19 Nov 1997 22:42:19 -0500
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From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
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Subject: File 1--Censorware Summit agenda (December 1-3)
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Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu, cypherpunks@toad.com
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[Note civil liberties and journalism groups are absent from the list of
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organizations represented. --Declan]
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===========
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
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Wednesday, November 19, 1997 Sydney Rubin, 301/654-5991
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Malena Hougen,
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202/828-9730
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INTERNET/ONLINE SUMMIT: FOCUS ON CHILDREN RELEASES AGENDA FOR MEETING,
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DECEMBER 1-3
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - Organizers of the Internet/Online Summit: Focus on Children
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today released an agenda for the historic three-day meeting of public
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interest and family advocates, educators, industry leaders and law
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enforcement officials joining forces to find ways to enhance the safety
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and education of children in cyberspace.
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The meeting is the first time so many diverse organizations have come
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together to address safety and content issues related to children and the
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new mass medium. The Summit is the first in a series of discussions on
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issues affecting children in cyberspace, including advertising, access,
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privacy, and marketing and content. The first meeting will focus on
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content and safety.
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The December 1-3 Summit will include speakers, panels, announcements of
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initiatives taken by the Summit and its participants, and a small
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exhibition of technological tools and educational resources available to
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help parents manage children's time on-line. Panelists will be announced
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prior to the Summit.
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The Summit Agenda, which is subject to change, follows:
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 5 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
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Registration and Opening Reception adjacent to technological tools kiosks
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.
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Breakfast
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Call to Order
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Speaker (Vice President Al Gore invited to speak)
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Presentation on Good Content with the Public Broadcasting System and others
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Framing the Issues: speaker Lois Jean White, President of the National PTA
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Panel in Framing the Issues
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Panel in "Safety"
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Luncheon Speakers: Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, Secretary of
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Commerce
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William M. Daley
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Presentation on Law Enforcement On-Line: Attorney General Janet Reno and
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panelists
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Presentation on Public Education: Secretary Richard W. Riley and panelists
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Presentation on the Technology Tool Kit
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Panel on Filtering and Ratings
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 8:30 a.m. - noon
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Breakfast
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Review of Previous Day: Christine Varney, Chairperson of the Summit
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Congressional Roundtable with Summit Participants
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Kids Panel Moderated by Linda Ellerbee
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Conclusion
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All activities will take place at the Renaissance Washington, D.C. Hotel at
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999 Ninth Street, N.W.
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Registration to attend the Summit must be done through the Summit's Web
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site: www.kidsonline.org. Separate registration forms are available at the
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site for journalists and the public, as well as other information as it
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become available.
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A partial list of the organizations sponsoring the Summit includes:
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AT&T America Online
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American Library Association Center for
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Democracy and Technology
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Center for Media Education Children Now
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The Children's Partnership CompuServe
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The Direct Marketing Association Disney Online
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Digital Equipment/Alta Vista Enough is Enough
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Family Education Company IBM
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Interactive Services Association The
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Learning Company/Cyber Patrol
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Microsoft Corporation MCI Communication
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Corporation
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NETCOM Net Nanny
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National Association of Secondary School Principals
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National Center for Missing & Exploited Children National Consumers
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League
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National Education Association National Law Center
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Surfwatch Time Warner
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------------------------------
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Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 11:21:37 EST
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From: "Rob Slade, doting grandpa of Ryan & Trevor"
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Subject: File 2--"Halting the Hacker" by Pipkin
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BKHLTHCK.RVW 970706
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"Halting the Hacker", Donald L. Pipkin, 1997, 0-13-243718-X, U$44.95/C$62.95
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%A Donald L. Pipkin
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%C One Lake St., Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458
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%D 1997
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%G 0-13-243718-X
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%I Prentice Hall
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%O U$44.95/C$62.95 201-236-7139 fax: 201-236-7131 betsy_carey@prenhall.com
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%P 193
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%T "Halting the Hacker: A Practical Guide to Computer Security"
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This book is a compilation of observations on computer security, particularly
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on network connected computers, and particularly in regard to outside
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intruders. What specific system information is included relates to UNIX.
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Most of the advice is generic. The information is "practical" in that it
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relates to common, rather than theoretical, attacks. However, the text does
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not provide practical answers: the defenses are left as an exercise to the
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reader.
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There is nothing really wrong with the information provided in the book. (I
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wasn't too thrilled with the section on viruses, but we'll let that go.) It
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has all, though, been said before, notably by works such as Spafford and
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Garfinkel's "Practical UNIX and Internet Security" (cf. BKPRUISC.RVW). In
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fact, there were passages that I'm quite sure I could have traced as to origin
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and author.
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Normally, I don't comment on CD-ROMs unless something unique is available. As
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with most such disks, this one provides information that is available
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elsewhere, mostly from COAST. Overall, though, in this case I think the CD-ROM
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does add some value, holding information such as the "Rainbow series" of
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security standards, and a list of machine address codes for Internet addressing
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as assigned to vendors.
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copyright Robert M. Slade, 1997 BKHLTHCK.RVW 970706
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 13:26:28 -0800 (PST)
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From: Dave Kinchlea <security@KINCH.ARK.COM>
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Subject: File 3--No Blocking in Canadian Libraries (fwd)
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I got this response after sending the note on Libraries (not) using
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blocking software to a friend at the London (Ontario Canada) Public
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Library. Thought perhaps CuD readers would be interested in their
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response. The author asked to remain anonymous, just for privacy's sake.
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
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Hi, Dave -
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Thanks for the article. We have had a really interesting kind of
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situation happening here at LPL for a while. London supports the notion
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of freedom of information in all its forms so none of our public internet
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machines are governed by any kind of blocking software. We have recently
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entered into a partnership with Bell Canada and have 3 of their Community
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Express kiosks in our libraries--these do use Cyberpatrol. The internet
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machines are all out in plain view in high-traffic zones. Until the Bell
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machines were installed, we had not had one complaint from a patron or
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staff member about offensive material displayed on the terminals. As soon
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as the Bell machine was up all the kids hotfoot it in here to see if they
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could beat the system. We had all kinds of naked women parading around
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the lobby.
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So, theory's great. Practical's better. Don't issue the challenge and no
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one's going to care!...
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 12 Nov 1997 18:59:31 EST
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From: Steve Talbott <stevet@ora.com>
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Subject: File 4--NETFUTURE--something new (Net & Education)
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: We won't be doing a special issue on
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Education until early February, so we'll print the entirety
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of Steve Talbott's recent NETFUTURE, which addresses
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Net teaching. There seems to be a small, but growing group of
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CuD readers who find the teaching stuff useful, so we'll try to
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run material periodically, but keep it confined to special issues)).
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+++++++
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I seem to have settled into an every-other-week schedule with the
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NETFUTURE newsletter. With today's posting I begin the occasional
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circulation of items separate from the newsletter. (I'll welcome your
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pointers to material that might be of interest to the readership.) These
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additional postings will normally occur during "off" weeks, and the
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frequency of all postings from NETFUTURE should still never be greater
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than one per week. It may be considerably less.
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This first posting is an edited compilation of material drawn mostly from
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NETFUTURE and dealing with technology and education. The idea was to pull
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together some responses to the most common arguments for wiring primary
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and secondary classrooms. I wanted to do it in aphoristic form, and in a
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single document that readers could give to their local teachers and school
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board members, or share with other mailing lists. (The current document
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has already found some good use in this regard.)
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I may well update these notes regularly, responding to new issues as they
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are raised, so please let me hear any critisms you have.
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November 12, 1997 1997.1
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##########################################################################
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# This article has been forwarded as a service of NETFUTURE. You may #
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# freely redistribute it, along with this message, for noncommercial #
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# purposes. For information about NETFUTURE and how to subscribe, visit #
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# the web page: http://www.oreilly.com/people/staff/stevet/netfuture/ #
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##########################################################################
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WIRED CLASSROOMS: WHAT YOU'RE NOT HEARING
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Stephen L. Talbott
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A Little History
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----------------
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Back in the late Seventies and early Eighties, computer-aided instruction
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(CAI) was going to revolutionize education. Then CAI lost its glitter and
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computer literacy was the rage -- students would learn to program in
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BASIC, and then become engineers and scientists. Today, you don't hear
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much about programming in BASIC (or any other language). Now we're
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convinced we have to let our kids mine the informational riches of the Net
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if they're not to fall hopelessly behind.
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Do we have a much clearer idea about why the Net is so essential to the
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child's education than we once did about why computer literacy or CAI was
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the critical thing? And are we so knowledgeable about this that we can
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confidently say, with full understanding of the trade-offs, "It's
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obviously better to invest billions of dollars in wiring our schools than
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to use these billions to improve teacher salaries, lower the
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teacher/student ratio, or add more highly trained staff"?
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Computers are not the first technology to promise an educational
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revolution. Here's what the New York *Times* wrote in 1923 about radio:
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The Hertzian waves will carry education as they do music to the
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backwoods, isolated farms and into the mountains of Tennessee, Kentucky
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and West Virginia. The limitations of "the little red schoolhouse"
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will pass away; the country schoolteacher will be reinforced by college
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professors and other specialists. Radio will be an institution of
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learning as well as a medium for entertainment and communication.
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Of course, when that promise soured, there was no need to be pessimistic;
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attention was already focused on the next, glittering opportunity --
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television:
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While children may be bored and restless when merely listening to a
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speaker [on radio] without seeing him, living talent or motion pictures
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broadcast at a certain time to all schools in a given area will capture
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and hold their interest. The fascination of television for children
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has already been demonstrated in the homes of those now possessing
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television receivers in the New York area. (Sarnoff, 1941)
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Today, we've all heard the new mantra countless times:
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You can't expect a passive medium like television to contribute much to
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the education of viewers. But with the advent of interactive computer
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networks, education will be revolutionized. The child's imagination
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will finally be set free to roam the world, guided by his own
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interests.
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And we already hear rumors of the next round:
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Why should students be interested in flat-screen interaction with a
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two-dimensional world? But with full-immersion virtual reality we can
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present the child with infinitely rich learning environments. He lives
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in the world he is learning about, and even helps to create it.
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The problem in all of this is not hard to grasp. The proponents of these
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new technologies have taken their eyes off the educational ball. They
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have not first identified an *educational* problem and then gone out and
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determined that, yes, computers do indeed look like the best of all
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possible solutions to this problem. Instead, bedazzled by the technology,
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they simply assume its necessity and try to figure out how it should be
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used. Absolutely convinced that they have an *answer*, they set about
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looking for the *question* -- upon which they are convinced their
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children's future must hang. Unfortunately, they never seem quite able to
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locate the question, which is forever shifting.
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Every proposal to bring computers into the classroom ought to be preceded
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by a clear statement of the educational problem to which the computers are
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expected to be the solution, along with an explanation of the solution.
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This is not too much to ask of an institution devoted to the cultivation
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of human *understanding*.
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Non-problems
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------------
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There are good reasons for having computers in (some) classrooms, and
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there are lousy ones. It just so happens that the reasons driving the
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current frenzy to wire our schools are almost uniformly lousy ones. They
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include the following:
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*** "We Need Computers Because They Give Students Access to So Much
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Information."
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But the availability of information is not the educational bottleneck. It
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has not been for several decades, if it ever was. Our challenge, given
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the infinitesimal fraction of available information we can actually use in
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the classroom, is how make it the occasion for a profound learning
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experience.
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As Neil Postman has remarked, "If a nuclear holocaust should occur some
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place in the world, it will not happen because of insufficient
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information; if children are starving in Somalia, it's not because of
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insufficient information; if crime terrorizes our cities, marriages are
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breaking up, mental disorders are increasing, and children are being
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abused, none of this happens because of a lack of information."
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In fact, Postman tells us, information is more like garbage than anything
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else. It assaults us from all sides, and needs to be cleared out if we're
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to blaze a path that the child can follow.
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When we think about the teachers who most decisively influenced us, what
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we remember above all is the teachers themselves, not some striking piece
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of information they conveyed. We saw in them what it meant to be a human
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being facing certain aspects of the world. *That* is a path a child can
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follow.
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The informational content of our learning is almost never as important as
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the intensity and qualitative vividness with which we work over this
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content as we bring it to life within us, or as the degree to which we
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exercise and extend our capacities in doing so. How do we gain this
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intensity and vividness? Most of all with the aid of a teacher or mentor
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who brings those qualities to our shared experiences.
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Louise Chawla at Kentucky State University has reviewed the published
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research about the influences that make people choose careers as
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environmentalists, naturalists, ecologists, and the like -- careers
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suggesting a concern for the natural world. Not surprisingly, two of the
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influences consistently showing up at the top of the list are (1) wild
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places directly experienced (usually at a young age); and (2) adult
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mentors (Chawla, forthcoming).
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*** "We Have To Prepare Our Kids for the Jobs of the Future."
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This argument is fatally off-target. The software that kids use today
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will not be the software they use five, ten, or fifteen years from now on
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the job. The World Wide Web, for which huge numbers of people are
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programming and creating content today, did not even exist four years ago.
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And, by all accounts, the pace of technical change is increasing rather
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than slowing down.
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The critical thing is to prepare centered, reflective, deeply grounded
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students who will, as adults, prove able to cope with the change.
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Students who have not come to know themselves and their own powers of
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understanding before they are exposed to the dizzying, adult world of
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technology and commerce will be the ones least likely to adapt in the end.
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Messrs. Clinton and Gore -- supported by high-tech corporations and far
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too many educators -- drill into us that we must train children to carry
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out twenty-first-century jobs. But that does not nearly raise the mark
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high enough. Our real task is to raise mature individuals who will be
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able to decide what sorts of jobs are worth creating and having in the
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twenty-first century. Adapting kids to existing technology is not the
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first priority; the first priority is to enable them to stand above all
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technology, as its masters rather than its tools.
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Ironically, the kids today are typically far ahead of their teachers in
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their adaptation. As many teachers today cast around frantically to
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figure out what they're supposed to do with the high-tech toys being
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pushed at them, the kids are often the ones who end up showing them how to
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use the stuff.
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A single semester's course for eighth graders could easily teach basic
|
||
|
typing, word-processing, spreadsheet, and web-search skills, preparatory
|
||
|
for any high-school requirements in this regard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
*** "We Have To Help Our Kids Become Global Citizens."
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you want to find out whether a child will become a good world citizen,
|
||
|
don't look at a file of her email correspondence. Just observe her
|
||
|
behavior on the playground for a few minutes -- assuming she spends her
|
||
|
class breaks on the playground, and not at her terminal playing video
|
||
|
games.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contrary to the prevailing, romantic picture, the Net invites yet further
|
||
|
de-emphasis of the single, most important learning community (consisting
|
||
|
of people who are fully present) in favor of a continuing retreat into
|
||
|
communal abstractions -- in particular, retreat into a community of others
|
||
|
whose odor, unpleasant habits, physical and spiritual needs, and even
|
||
|
challenging ideas, a student doesn't have to reckon with in quite the same
|
||
|
way her neighbor demands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A technology educator once remarked to me that he's seen students who
|
||
|
spend time corresponding with pen pals in Kuala Lumpur never bothering to
|
||
|
say a word to the Asian students who locker right next to them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As to the multicultural benefits of online exposure, certain basic truths
|
||
|
have yet to make their appearance in the public discussion. Lowell Monke
|
||
|
taught for several years at a private, international school in Quito,
|
||
|
Ecuador -- a school that now has Internet access. These kids, he points
|
||
|
out, "raised in a society influenced by cable TV and vacations in Miami,"
|
||
|
are hardly in a position to educate American children about a native
|
||
|
culture that predates the Incas. Go twenty miles outside the city,
|
||
|
however, and you will find that those who live in the thatched-roof huts
|
||
|
don't even have power outlets, let alone Internet access.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The global network of techno-haves reinforces the participants'
|
||
|
impression that they live in a homogeneous thought-world, leading 'Net
|
||
|
gurus to extol the virtue of the 'Net as a means for discovering
|
||
|
commonalities among "all" people of the world. The irony is, of course,
|
||
|
that the similarities being discovered are those that high technology
|
||
|
itself has spread. (Monke, 1997)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Perhaps the most convincing reason for use of the Net has to do with
|
||
|
learning a foreign language. But even here it's useful to see how
|
||
|
distorted the rhetoric about computers has become. It is, of course,
|
||
|
perfectly reasonable for the more advanced language student to look for
|
||
|
opportunities to correspond with language natives. Setting aside the
|
||
|
likelihood that there are native speakers in the local community, this
|
||
|
opportunity has long been available -- and occasionally taken advantage of
|
||
|
-- courtesy of the postal system. And without massive capital outlay.
|
||
|
Students who send and receive one email message per day can just as easily
|
||
|
send and receive one letter per day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fact that email has suddenly given new life to the penpal idea is
|
||
|
certainly owing to the computer's (temporary) glamor. Is glamor the
|
||
|
substance of the new educational paradigm?
|
||
|
|
||
|
*** "CD-ROMs Bring the World to the Student's Desktop."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is true that CD-ROMs, like television nature programs, carry images and
|
||
|
sounds that would otherwise remain unavailable to students. But to leave
|
||
|
the matter there is, again, to ignore what is essential to *education*.
|
||
|
Listen to this true story:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yesterday my eleven-year old son and I were hiking in a remote wood.
|
||
|
He was leading. He spotted [a] four-foot rattlesnake in the trail
|
||
|
about six feet in front of us. We watched it for quite some time
|
||
|
before going around it. When we were on the way home, he commented
|
||
|
that this was the best day of his life. He was justifiably proud of
|
||
|
the fact that he had been paying attention and had thus averted an
|
||
|
accident, and that he had been able to observe this powerful,
|
||
|
beautiful, and sinister snake.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Barry Angell, the father, then asked exactly the right question: "I
|
||
|
wonder how many armchair nature-watchers have seen these dangerous snakes
|
||
|
on the tube and said `this is the best day of my life.'" And he
|
||
|
concluded: "Better one rattlesnake in the trail than a whole menagerie of
|
||
|
gorillas, lions, and elephants on the screen" (Talbott, 1995: 160).
|
||
|
|
||
|
The point is not that children have to encounter rattlesnakes or other
|
||
|
exotic and dangerous animals. The essential question, rather, has to do
|
||
|
with how children forge an inner connection to *whatever* experience of
|
||
|
the world they are having. The dramatic footage on the screen distances
|
||
|
the child from the subject matter, which is why this footage is not often
|
||
|
the cause of memorable days. And to the extent the child *is* affected by
|
||
|
it -- most likely to happen in the case of jolting special effects -- the
|
||
|
result is more like something that is *done* to the child than something
|
||
|
he gains from his own capacity to connect to the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Imagine that the boy's father had begun tormenting the snake, and that
|
||
|
together they had thrown rocks at it, finally leaving it killed or
|
||
|
injured. We can be quite sure that the boy would not have celebrated the
|
||
|
best day of his life. In fact, assuming that all natural feeling had not
|
||
|
yet been deadened within him, we can guess that he would have felt
|
||
|
distinctly out of sorts by the end of the day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But that, of course, is not what happened. The father clearly felt wonder
|
||
|
at the snake's presence, admiration for its beauty, grace, and power, and
|
||
|
a receptive curiosity about its nature. Without this context, the boy's
|
||
|
experience could not have been what it was. What counted was not only
|
||
|
that he met a snake on the trail, but that he found something
|
||
|
the deficit by subjecting them to more distant, more mediated experiences,
|
||
|
however exotic. The quest for powerful sensations can only have the
|
||
|
opposite effect, blinding children to the "routine" wonders of their own
|
||
|
experience:
|
||
|
|
||
|
As an environmental educator leading field walks for many years, I
|
||
|
found I often had to wrestle with the fact that kids (and adults) who
|
||
|
had been raised on lots of [nature] programming expected the same sort
|
||
|
of visual extravaganza to unfold before their eyes; they expected a
|
||
|
host of colorful species to appear and "perform" for them. (Kevin
|
||
|
Dann, quoted in Talbott, 1995, p. 161)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Why the Computer Belongs in Education -- and When
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a society we suffer, paradoxically, not only from a certain giddiness
|
||
|
and euphoria about the dramatic changes brought by technology, but also
|
||
|
from a kind of technophobia. For all the eagerness to bring the computer
|
||
|
into our classrooms, we seem unwilling to have our students *confront* the
|
||
|
computer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Encouraging students simply to consume the offerings of the computer and
|
||
|
the Net (and of corporate sponsors) is the truly timid approach -- rather
|
||
|
like uncritically turning the classroom over to television. The computer,
|
||
|
after all, is not a *less* tendentious form of technology than television;
|
||
|
by its very nature as a logic machine, it is capable of embodying more
|
||
|
tendencies, biases, assumptions, cultural imperatives, and hidden agendas
|
||
|
than any other technology ever developed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When children are asked to employ complex technologies as "black boxes,"
|
||
|
they almost certainly defer to those technologies in inappropriate ways.
|
||
|
They fail to understand their experiences, and abdicate their own
|
||
|
responsibilities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The need, then, is to demystify the computer for children, enabling them
|
||
|
to understand the nature and limitations of this remarkable machine. How
|
||
|
did it arise historically? Who were the inventors, and what was driving
|
||
|
them? What sorts of problems are suitable for the computer's algorithmic,
|
||
|
or recipe-like, functioning? What problems do not lend themselves to this
|
||
|
functioning? How does the computer's intelligence differ from human
|
||
|
intelligence?
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Morris, a computer engineer and educator, has put together an
|
||
|
instructional block for eighth or ninth graders in which just such inquiry
|
||
|
is undertaken. In addition, students resort to the laboratory, where they
|
||
|
undertake work giving them a basic understanding of the technologies
|
||
|
supporting the modern computer -- magnetics for memory and disk drives,
|
||
|
primitive relay-based calculators, and so on. Then they visit Boston's
|
||
|
Computer Museum, where they can see some of the machines they've been
|
||
|
learning about. They also see how computers assist us in various jobs --
|
||
|
weather prediction, air traffic control, automated directory assistance,
|
||
|
reading for the blind. Finally, back at school, the students pull apart a
|
||
|
personal computer -- dismantling its disk drive as well -- to see how the
|
||
|
machine is constructed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Understanding the technology and simply using it are two different things.
|
||
|
One can play video games for years while having almost no understanding of
|
||
|
the underlying technology. During the high-school years students should
|
||
|
begin to gain an *understanding*. Use -- and, far more important,
|
||
|
*appropriate* use -- will naturally follow from the understanding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How much of the pressure from parents and teachers to "bring the schools
|
||
|
up to date with computers" is the result of their own insecurities,
|
||
|
projections, and hopes in the presence of a technology that has never been
|
||
|
demystified for them?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morris reports this classroom incident:
|
||
|
|
||
|
While I was teaching this year, the famous chess tournament between
|
||
|
Kasparov and Big Blue was held. I brought to the classroom a magazine
|
||
|
that offered the banner, "The Brain's Last Stand: Kasparov versus Big
|
||
|
Blue." "That's silly," said one student. "It's not a man versus a
|
||
|
machine; it's a man versus the people who programmed the machine!"
|
||
|
One could not ask for a greater insight into this media- and industry-
|
||
|
hyped event. The students will understand that the theory behind the
|
||
|
machine and its construction, though challenging, is knowable. They
|
||
|
will look upon computers differently. Yes, the computer will still be
|
||
|
seductive and alluring. Computer games appeal to their innocence and
|
||
|
curiosity. But the machines will look a bit more like a tool and an
|
||
|
invention, whose sole purpose is controlled by the user, not the other
|
||
|
way around. (Talbott, 1997)
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is worth adding that much of this desirable, high-school education
|
||
|
about computers can take place without there being any computers in the
|
||
|
classroom. For example, the algorithmic nature of the computer's
|
||
|
functioning can be taught using such things as kitchen recipes. And the
|
||
|
students caildren to the "routine" wonders of their own
|
||
|
experience:
|
||
|
|
||
|
As an environmental educator leading field walks for many years, I
|
||
|
found I often had to wrestle with the fact that kids (and adults) who
|
||
|
had been raised on lots of [nature] programming expected the same sort
|
||
|
of visual extravaganza to unfold before their eyes; they expected a
|
||
|
host of colorful species to appear and "perform" for them. (Kevin
|
||
|
Dann, quoted in Talbott, 1995, p. 161)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Why the Computer Belongs in Education -- and When
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a society we suffer, paradoxically, not only from a certain giddiness
|
||
|
and euphoria about the dramatic changes brought by technology, but also
|
||
|
from a kind of technophobia. For all the eagerness to bring the computer
|
||
|
into our classrooms, we seem unwilling to have our students *confront* the
|
||
|
computer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Encouraging students simply to consume the offerings of the computer and
|
||
|
the Net (and of corporate sponsors) is the truly timid approach -- rather
|
||
|
like uncritically turning the classroom over to television. The computer,
|
||
|
after all, is not a *less* tendentious form of technology than television;
|
||
|
by its very nature as a logic machine, it is capable of embodying more
|
||
|
tendencies, biases, assumptions, cultural imperatives, and hidden agendas
|
||
|
than any other technology ever developed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When children are asked to employ complex technologies as "black boxes,"
|
||
|
they almost certainly defer to those technologies in inappropriate ways.
|
||
|
They fail to understand their experiences, and abdicate their own
|
||
|
responsibilities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The need, then, is to demystify the computer for children, enabling them
|
||
|
to understand the nature and limitations of this remarkable machine. How
|
||
|
did it arise historically? Who were the inventors, and what was driving
|
||
|
them? What sorts of problems are suitable for the computer's algorithmic,
|
||
|
or recipe-like, functioning? What problems do not lend themselves to this
|
||
|
functioning? How does the computer's intelligence differ from human
|
||
|
intelligence?
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Morris, a computer engineer and educator, has put together an
|
||
|
instructional block for eighth or ninth graders in which just such inquiry
|
||
|
is undertaken. In addition, students resort to the laboratory, where they
|
||
|
undertake work giving them a basic understanding of the technologies
|
||
|
supporting the modern computer -- magnetics for memory and disk drives,
|
||
|
primitive relay-based calculators, and so on. Then they visit Boston's
|
||
|
Computer Museum, where they can see some of the machines they've been
|
||
|
learning about. They also see how computers assist us in various jobs --
|
||
|
weather prediction, air traffic control, automated directory assistance,
|
||
|
reading for the blind. Finally, back at school, the students pull apart a
|
||
|
personal computer -- dismantling its disk drive as well -- to see how the
|
||
|
machine is constructed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Understanding the technology and simply using it are two different things.
|
||
|
One can play video games for years while having almost no understanding of
|
||
|
the underlying technology. During the high-school years students should
|
||
|
begin to gain an *understanding*. Use -- and, far more important,
|
||
|
*appropriate* use -- will naturally follow from the understanding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How much of the pressure from parents and teachers to "bring the schools
|
||
|
up to date with computers" is the result of their own insecurities,
|
||
|
projections, and hopes in the presence of a technology that has never been
|
||
|
demystified for them?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morris reports this classroom incident:
|
||
|
|
||
|
While I was teaching this year, the famous chess tournament between
|
||
|
Kasparov and Big Blue was held. I brought to the classroom a magazine
|
||
|
that offered the banner, "The Brain's Last Stand: Kasparov versus Big
|
||
|
Blue." "That's silly," said one student. "It's not a man versus a
|
||
|
machine; it's a man versus the people who programmed the machine!"
|
||
|
One could not ask for a greater insight into this media- and industry-
|
||
|
hyped event. The students will understand that the theory behind the
|
||
|
machine and its construction, though challenging, is knowable. They
|
||
|
will look upon computers differently. Yes, the computer will still be
|
||
|
seductive and alluring. Computer games appeal to their innocence and
|
||
|
curiosity. But the machines will look a bit more like a tool and an
|
||
|
invention, whose sole purpose is controlled by the user, not the other
|
||
|
way around. (Talbott, 1997)
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is worth adding that much of this desirable, high-school education
|
||
|
about computers can take place without there being any computers in the
|
||
|
classroom. For example, the algorithmic nature of the computer's
|
||
|
functioning can be taught using such things as kitchen recipes. And the
|
||
|
students can learn about the basic operations of the computer's CPU,
|
||
|
buses, memory, and so on, by acting them out -- one of the more effective
|
||
|
ways of imparting a real understanding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Educators Must Grapple with Technology
|
||
|
--------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
One can easily imagine the first users of the automobile thinking, "What a
|
||
|
wonderful tool for strengthening our communities! It's so easy to hop in
|
||
|
the car and drive across town to visit with friends or people in need!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, the opportunity was there. But the nature of the car, interacting
|
||
|
with our own natures, had, by most accounts, a rather different overall
|
||
|
effect upon our communities. Urban sprawl, ghettos walled off by freeway
|
||
|
ramps, malls, the "escapist" mindset of car-owners, air and noise
|
||
|
pollution, long commutes .... The positive potentials remain even now, but
|
||
|
it is foolish to celebrate them without heeding the full text of the
|
||
|
bargain we have struck with the technology.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Or consider television. One could have said -- many did say -- that now
|
||
|
we would bring politics into the intimacy of every living room, and there
|
||
|
would be a renaissance of democracy in America. Yet the actual fact, as
|
||
|
most would acknowledge, has been quite different: the immediacy of the
|
||
|
screen somehow translates into a greater distance. The political process
|
||
|
becomes more remote, more artificial and scripted, less sincere. It "goes
|
||
|
cosmetic." The involvement of those who watch in front of the screen is
|
||
|
less intense, not more so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Do we understand why it happened this way? And if we do, have we learned
|
||
|
how to prevent the same problems from infecting those other screens we are
|
||
|
now importing wholesale into our classrooms?
|
||
|
|
||
|
One thing is sure: no school that does not look into these issues with
|
||
|
all the wisdom it can muster, and does not become passionate about them,
|
||
|
can possibly resist the parental, professional, and political pressures to
|
||
|
wire the classroom. Only a school with a sense of mission and a
|
||
|
willingness to undertake a difficult conversation with its community has
|
||
|
any hope of steering a purposeful course through the hype, the industry
|
||
|
propaganda, and the public's near-religious view of technology.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tragedy is that so many schools are rushing ahead with a fundamental
|
||
|
transformation of their classrooms *without* any considered sense of
|
||
|
mission, but only with a vague feeling of necessity or compulsion. Our
|
||
|
children, some years from now, will doubtless let us know the results of
|
||
|
our willingness to make of their lives a grand experiment -- an experiment
|
||
|
founded upon our own reluctance to confront technology and put it in its
|
||
|
rightful place.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bibliography
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chawla L. (forthcoming). "Significant Life Experiences Revisited: A
|
||
|
Review of Research on Sources of Environmental Sensitivity." *Journal of
|
||
|
Environmental Education*.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Monke, Lowell (1997). "Letter from Des Moines," in NETFUTURE,
|
||
|
http://www.ora.com/people/staff/stevet/netfuture/1997/May2297_49.html.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sarnoff, David (1941). *Annals of the American Academy of Political and
|
||
|
Social Sciences*, January, 1941.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Talbott, Stephen L. (1995). *The Future Does Not Compute: Transcending
|
||
|
the Machines in Our Midst*. Sebastopol, Calif.: O'Reilly & Associates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Talbott, Steve (1997). "Helping Students Understand Computers: John
|
||
|
Morris's Innovations at a Waldorf School," in NETFUTURE,
|
||
|
http://www.ora.com/people/staff/stevet/netfuture/1997/Jul3097_54.html.
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
|
||
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
||
|
Subject: File 5--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
||
|
available at no cost electronically.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
|
||
|
|
||
|
Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line:
|
||
|
|
||
|
SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
|
||
|
Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6436), fax (815-753-6302)
|
||
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
||
|
60115, USA.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
|
||
|
Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
|
||
|
(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
|
||
|
news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
|
||
|
LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
|
||
|
libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
|
||
|
the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
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|
On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
|
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|
on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
|
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|
CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
|
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1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
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In ITALY: ZERO! BBS: +39-11-6507540
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UNITED STATES: ftp.etext.org (206.252.8.100) in /pub/CuD/CuD
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Web-accessible from: http://www.etext.org/CuD/CuD/
|
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|
ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
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|
aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
|
||
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world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
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wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
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EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/CuD/CuD/ (Finland)
|
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|
ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
|
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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Cu Digest WWW site at:
|
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
|
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|
they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
|
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
|
||
|
specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
|
||
|
relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
|
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|
preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
|
||
|
unless absolutely necessary.
|
||
|
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|
DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
||
|
the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
|
||
|
responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
||
|
violate copyright protections.
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|
------------------------------
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End of Computer Underground Digest #9.89
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************************************
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