Extropian Kids

From: Rick Knight (rknight@platinum.com)
Date: Sat Aug 23 1997 - 13:15:58 MDT


     As a relatively intelligent person with a sensitive personality and a
     puny physique growing up, I empathize with those who had to endure
     cruelty from other children in schoolyard situations. Either you were
     met with admonition from teachers to toughen up or you were
     mollycoddled by them (making things worse).
     
     With the advent of two-way fiber optic telecommunications, I think it
     would behoove us to start forming small collectives. Not every parent
     wishes to work outside the house and there are certainly a number of
     adults with a desire to instruct and assist young minds as they grow.
     
     Wouldn't it be grand if we could have small neighborhood home schools
     with maybe six kids using the TV, PC, even the Nintendo as interactive
     tools to get information? As laptops become more the norm, it could
     become as common a school supply as a compass or ruler (over
     simplification alert, I know). I'm speaking of those parents with the
     capability of organizing such groups. It compels us to personalize
     education, get along better with one another, negotiate disputes not
     only between children's conflicts but parents. We tend to have such a
     "take our toys and go home" attitude in this culture when we don't get
     our way. The art of comprimise is woefully lacking.
     
     Even as an adult, my desire to learn is greatly stimulated by the
     information becoming more and more available on the Internet. In the
     mind of a conscientious child, how much more would that desire be
     present?
     
     There are all kinds of negative factors to discuss along with this:
     the dysfunctional child that doesn't respond to reason or discipline,
     the inequality that stems from those in a class with access to hi-tech
     and those in the poorer classes that don't. But as far as
     Extropian-minded individuals and their children, I think banding
     together and forming small educational groups for their kids would be
     a good start towards taking back control of education, which at least
     in the public sector, seems to be very mismanaged, disoriented by
     crime and social dysfunction and poorly funded.
     
     Rick



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:44:45 MST