Friday, July 6, 2007

My First (Formal) e-Learning Experience


When I was a wee thing, I was lucky enough to have a father who was both a maths teacher and a gadget lover. He liked any new technology, which is why we had a radio/cassette/mini tv player at a time when we couldn't afford a new roof for the house.

It's also how we got a BBC Micro computer when I was just a tot. These were great educational machines, and we spent hours in front of it. I remember learning about grids in a game that we called 'Find the Rhino', which consisted of an 8x8 grid, somewhere in which a rhino was hiding. We all took turns in keying in a co-ordinate, and eventually someone would find the rhino, which would flash up large and green on the 2-colour screen. We LOVED our BBC micro, and used to spend hours coding and debugging games for it.

But all that was just fun...the first learning experience I remember identifying as a formal learning experience was trying out a demo copy of Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing. The demo only taught one row of the keyboard - asdfghjkl; - but we were hooked. Why did it work so well? It was simple, repetitive and visual. The programme had the feel of an arcade game, so the six of us would sit around and compete at who was fastest and most accurate at typing.

When I went to secondary school I had to take typing classes. How did we learn? On manual typewriters. The teacher had a book from which she'd shout out the letters we were to type. We had a keyboard diagram stuck on the blackboard. Everyone was stuck at the same pace. And it took years for us to learn what we'd learned at home in just hours.

I was frustrated then. I felt slowed down and held up. I wonder how today's students - with access to a huge range of online learning materials - feel? Perhaps like the student who explained that 'Whenever I go into class, I have to power down'.

In this digital age, will home schooling become the choice of education for tech-savvy, informed parents?

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home