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Scott, Chris, Michael, <br>
<br>
so good to hear from you!<br>
<br>
so, we're not supposed to like it! :-( (reverse psych won't work
with me, guys) :-)<br>
<br>
Well, anything that writes about Sugar in the past or at least as
something missing a major overhaul /does/ get my attention. Not that
Sugar is bad, to the contrary, but that it could be (have been :-))
*so* much better, were it not hampered by reality-disconnected
ideology...<br>
<br>
Which, of course, doesn't mean I am sold out on NELL<br>
<br>
(your section number, paragraph number)<br>
(Abstract, 1)<br>
<i>used by...</i> IMVHO should be <i>distributed to</i>. Very
little evidence that Sugar is actually *used* anywhere regularly,
that I know of, besides maybe Nepal. (y'all know this better than
many...)<br>
(1,1)<br>
Solar has so many wrongs in Real World... Will work a piece on that.<br>
(1,2) <br>
note that here you have the machine /initiating/ the interaction.
Everywhere else you seem to have it as the kid being in charge. BIG
difference, except the passing mention in (4,2).<br>
For that latter, well said!<br>
(1,2)<br>
What if she doesn't nod? (or accept to have a story right at this
second?)<br>
Everything here seems to be built upon the assumption, which doesn't
hold to any assessment on children-initiated learning I know of,
that the kid will *take* to Nell, just like that and for the
duration...<br>
(1,4-5)<br>
I love this! the machine asking for some different kind of action.
Very powerful (actually this idea is the one I like most in the
whole paper, and not hard to implement)<br>
Again, unclear how pervasive is this thing about the machine asking
things, and how will this work if the kid doesn't submit in full?
Non-trivial, I say.<br>
(1,6) <br>
there's something VERY powerful here, "the book tells her ... very
good <i><b>at</b></i>". (3.1,5) sort of very weakly follows up with
"<b>inferred</b> learning style". This segue is so weak precisely in
the approach that *I* :-) consider paramount, a major area that
needs, *deserves* building on. Great foundation y'all are fixin' -
most authors miss these issues at all - yet needs muscle and a
sharper edge.<br>
<br>
(2.1,1) "like <b>all</b> humans". Yes, the whole proposal relies on
*<b>stories</b>* being the Grail, but, if you really mean 2.2 and
abjure of one-size-fits-all pedagogy (which I think you are trying),
then this needs the qualifier "most". <br>
(I still think you got a great concept in the storybook metaphor -
this I'm nagging out of principle)<br>
(2.1,2)<br>
characters ... specific . Hmmm, makes me wonder if it would somehow
make someone like a given subject area if they associate themselves
with the character. What if were the kid who assigns
subjects/areas/personalities to the characters? <br>
then, of course, each one's own story would be different from the
other kid's stories, but I see nothing wrong with that. Neal
Stephenson and any SF/parallel universe lover would be proud of such
a twist! it also fits with 2.2,3, and certainly "pervasive
customization" in 4,2<br>
<br>
traditional lesson plan... aha! Whose? would that be a
one-size-fits-all lesson plan? (that would be very baaaad, and total
loosage)<br>
(2.1,3)<br>
The biggest weakness of Sugar is this ideology of kid initiated
learning. A Good (capital G) learning platform gives more guidance
than kuddos or a contextual help (BTW, I find Power's paper tells
little about why that particular approach). IT-platform pedagogy
guidance is a *major* subject of research for me, but this is not my
paper, so I'll pass.<br>
<br>
I *loooove* the handwriting bit, here and elsewhere. I always felt
it was a crying shame the pads on the sides of the XO didn't make it
beyond the testing stage.<br>
(2.2)<br>
Just this one area, well handled, could give us this time a chance
to change the world :-). I'll look for a paper on adaptive learning
I found somewhere, so you also get more conversant on this. It's
quite obvious y'all know a bit or two about AI. I want to encourage
your interest on adaptive, which I hope you will deepen on, so Nell
will spearhead success.<br>
(2.2,2 Am I the only one that shudders when hearing or seeing the
word <i>Journal</i>? :-))<br>
(2.3,2)<br>
"growing intelligence"? I just did a word search of something
nagging me in the background, and confirmed that your paper does not
once use the word "knowledge"... hmmm. Is that supposed to mean
anything?<br>
(2.3,3)<br>
Does this mean Nell will be issued to teachers also? and the
teachers expected to *use* it? Well, good luck! I have a mind to
re-read your paper with a marker to highlight every idea that has
been tried already with limited or no success (for the record: I
have always been a supporter of using the XO for "grownup stuff",
and never belittle it as a "children's machine" - currently I am
writing a manual to use the XO for mighty microcontroller
programming). The problem here is of getting the grownups buy-in. If
Nicholas used the machine, it might be believable, some. Am I the
only one who has presented at a conference with a paper and
presentation 100% done in the XO? Dunno if even RMS did more than
check his email. Danceswithcars, hail!<br>
(2.3,5)<br>
Oh! so there is such a thing as a "capable child", with giftings
uncommon to the rest! :-)<br>
(applause for daring to publish such a not-PC, non teachers-union
notion, though in all fairness I might have to reach for that
highlighter...)<br>
(2.4,2)<br>
get rid of the "our"<br>
Careful about lowering the floor so bad that anything worthy of more
just falls to the basement. I also do wonder how source code editing
works on a handwriting interface<br>
<br>
(3,1)<br>
"The" would look more scientsy than "our". "We" is OK<br>
(3.1-2)<br>
OK, so you know about storytelling AI. What about, say, a math
module?<br>
(3.3)<br>
JS? hmmm, interesting. I guess it cannot be worse than Python. Can
you please leave LOGO and a command line easily accessible also? <br>
<br>
(4,2)<br>
What you mean by "pedagogical guidance" for the students (and
teachers) needs more flesh, since its absence (חוֹשֶך) probably
accounts for more of Sugar's plagues than keyboard issues (merely
שְׁחִין), and thus an alternative needs to be more explicit. Again,
applause for daring to tell some of it.<br>
<br>
(5,2)<br>
When you are deploy-testing it, please focus on how much it can fly
by itself, and if at all, whether it remains interesting when
novelty has past and further nice-bwana input and encouragement is
not the primary mover.<br>
<br>
I hope some of this is of any use to you guys. I really do
appreciate your hard work, and I do dare to be somewhat sharper than
usual because I hope you're still the tough guys I have had the
honor to learn from and spend quality time with.<br>
I'll follow up with the URL to that adaptive-learning piece, I
thought I saw it in the garage recently. As I keep learning more
about what doesn't work and why, I become more than ever convinced
that adaptive is the way to go, for something scalable, relevant,
and a win-win, especially where education structure is a fail -
which seems to inch toward also including places too close to
home...<br>
<br>
Yama<br>
<br>
<br>
On 03/13/2012 06:07 PM, C. Scott Ananian wrote:
<blockquote
cite="mid:CADBWd2j5y_RwBZW7T6LOc-ctwLsa-vL52maAQ6-Jtqfz4NgdKw@mail.gmail.com"
type="cite">I read the following today:<br>
<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;
border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
"A healthy [project] is, confusingly, one at odds with itself.
There is a healthy part which is attempting to normalize and to
create predictability, and there needs to be another part that
is tasked with building something new that is going to disrupt
and eventually destroy that normality." (<a
moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2012/03/13/hacking_is_important.html">http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2012/03/13/hacking_is_important.html</a>)</blockquote>
<div><br>
</div>
<div>So, in this vein, I'd like to encourage Sugar-folk to read
the short paper Chris Ball, Michael Stone, and I just submitted
(to IDC 2012) on Nell, our design for XO-3 software for the
reading project:</div>
<div><br>
</div>
<div> <a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://cscott.net/Publications/OLPC/idc2012.pdf">http://cscott.net/Publications/OLPC/idc2012.pdf</a></div>
<div><br>
</div>
<div>You're expected not to like it: this is supposed to be the
Barbarian viewpoint. ;-) Regardless, I've love to hear feedback
on what exactly you didn't like, so that I can improve the
arguments for the final published version (assuming the paper
gets accepted). Thanks!<br>
</div>
<div> --scott</div>
<div><br>
</div>
<div>-- <br>
( <a moz-do-not-send="true" href="http://cscott.net">http://cscott.net</a>
)</div>
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