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0x023 summary
Files changed or refered to:
http://www.seul.org/research/survey.html
http://www.seul.org/research/altern.html
http://www.seul.org/research/sdoc.html
1) Addition of receiving data types for all of the questions (refers
to the sdoc discussion page) [Luka]
2) Moved SMP from Hardware section to Interface section [Arma]
3) Changed part about being able to use GUI or CLI in Interface section
[Arma]
4) Added 'Having the operating system already installed and configured
when purchased' to Interface section [Charles]
5) Didn't change hardware section, as discussion about USB/FireWire is
still ongoing. [Arma / Bob / Pete]
6) Moved software type listings to alternative page
7) Some general tidying up
8) Added 'Availability of a wide variety of software,' and
'Availability of educational software' to the Operating System
section.
9) Moved educational stuff to alternative page; needs more work.
I'll probably (rightfully) get skewered for having done this; don't
get me wrong, I really think this is an important subject. BUT:
a) We're going after mainstream users. Educational software by
definition isn't mainstream. Yet. We could help that, though.
b) Where wp's, ss's, db's and such serve a general purpose which
can be tailored by their primary users who normally have
advanced technical skills, teachers in general do not have
these skills nor have the opportunity to get the skills to
build the software. As an advanced user, and post-secondary
computer instructor for four years I've seen many people in
the teaching profession try to get a grasp on how this
technology could be used to their benefit, and seen a lot of
scared and disappointed teachers as a result.
Granted - the use of computers in most classes is still
at the introductory phase. What I think would be really useful
is some sort of toolset or wizard to help develop teaching
tools. Some 4GL-like metatool that a non-programmer teacher can
use to create the opportunity to reinforce classroom
instruction for every student while still remaining challenging
for the students who catch on more rapidly.
Some questions that came to mind while thinking about educational
software were:
What does it do?
How can I use it to help teach my subject area?
Does it use multimedia, and does it do so appropriately (appropriate
images and sounds for the subject at hand)?
What age group could it be used it with?
What does it reinforce, what does it help teach?
Does it produce a report on the student's progress though the task for
later analysis?
Is there a program I can use for a particular teaching area?
Is there a program I can use to help organize my grading / student eval?
Is it readily customisable by a non-programmer?
It seems that there would be the opportunity for a whole open-source
effort to develop these and other educational tools. Just a thought.
Most importantly, though, even though I removed the existing questions
from the survey, I really would like to put good educational software
questions on the survey. My concern is that we may not do the subject
any favours if we don't put good questions on the survey. Reactions,
ideas, suggestions? I would really like to pursue this ...
Cheers,
Pete
--
Pete St. Onge - McGill U. Limnology - Fun with Ropes & Buckets
pete@seul.org http://wwp.mirabilis.com/4322052