If the school is in fact using that policy as a means for withdrawing on-campus support, I totally agree that it's a bad policy.

Expecting people that are holding down jobs and in many cases looking after small children and often having transportation issues to truck themselves to the campus to access computers is also a bad policy, in my opinion.

Many of the students here in Pueblo county are miles away from the campus in a small city that has pathetic public transportation. Many are living on welfare and don't have the means to get to the campus in the evenings, since the pathetic bus system doesn't run after 6:00pm. Those people get left behind if the only access they have is on-campus, or in a public library that is just as inaccessible.

I think this issue gets serious when you aren't in a metropolitan area and have a large low-income population. Lots of people find themselves on the outside, looking in.

Jacqueline A. Morris wrote:
I think the relevant skills can be developed with the use of public access
computers on campus. The requirement for "computer ownership" is designed to
shift the burden of providing the facilities for learning from the
institution to the student. What will be next? Removing the books from the
library as it is too expensive to maintain, and we can find out everything
online (on our shiny new expensive laptop) for a fee?
________________________________________
Jacqueline Morris
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.jacquelinemorris.com
_________________________________________

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Thomas A Webb
Sent: Wednesday, 01 September 2004 03:05
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
Subject: Re: [DDN] Mandatory Laptop computers

I taught in community colleges for over thirty years before I retired. I
agree with the requirement for college students to have a computer; it's a
little wierd to think you can get a good education and be hireable without
having basic skills and using them routinely.

<snip>
I think a more informed policy would be one that includes home desktop
computers, speaks to document interchange and permits the use of recycled
equipment would work a LOT better.

Debbie Podwika wrote:

"Let's make college even less affordable! Unless financial aid covers up to the full cost depending on income, this is simply another way to make a college education less affordable on top of tuition increases, the high cost of books, and limits to financial aid."


...snip..... -- Thomas A Webb http://www.ospueblo.com - Open Source and Educational Resources http://wordwonder.com - For Readers and Thinkers

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--
Thomas A Webb
http://www.ospueblo.com - Open Source and Educational Resources
http://wordwonder.com - For Readers and Thinkers

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