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Re: Requirements educational programs must fulfill (from journal article)
Roman Suzi wrote:
>
> 3) the program must be real (not demo) and could be used to
> fulfill students needs for information processing. That is, it
> must be able to be used in student's individual work
>
> 5) Built-in well-structured context help system
>
> 6) The educational program must be able to work under some
> script (or macros) so the teacher could make demos and
> tutorials
>
> 7) Stability and security of software in the class room.
> Exe-files must not be corrupted by user actions or be easily
> replaced by copying in no time.
>
> 8) There must be textbook/exercise book support, which present
> material "from simple to complex". Professional books and
> reference guides are not suitable!
From these requirements it does sound as though many existing Linux
applications would fit quite well into this educational environment
except for one thing. That's the textbook/excercise book support. For
those of you on the mailing list who are thinking, "I really want to
help promote Linux in education, but I don't feel that I'm a good enough
coder to contribute anything of value," here's a place to make a
meaningful contribution. Pick an application (since it was mentioned,
Gnumeric comes to mind), learn it in detail, and write the textbooks and
exercise books that would enable it to be used in the various curricula
around the world that are using some less appropriate programs. This
could and probably should be a collaborative effort; certainly the
various drafts of whatever documents get developed should be available
for comment and peer review here on the list or at some location on the
SEUL website.
--
Doug Loss It is impossible to imagine Goethe
Data Network Coordinator or Beethoven being good at billiards
Bloomsburg University or golf.
dloss@bloomu.edu H. L. Mencken