To Alfred Bork:

Alfred, since it is your practice not to go into detail on your views and
proposals for solving the global education crisis but to send those
interested to your books, there is often misunderstanding of what you are
criticizing and what you are proposing.

I'd like to try summarizing your position in stark black and white terms,
risking misrepresenting  the position but trusting that you will then
correct my errors and add the necessary shadings and nuances.

First: you have been since the 1970's a leader in the movement to use the
computer and allied intellectual technologies such as artificial
intelligence to create what have been called "intelligent tutoring systems."

Such tutoring systems have the student interact solely with the computer and
the software that guides the process of individualized student learning. You
argue that if the system has been well designed no intervention by a live
teacher is required for good learning.

An important plank in your current position is that the size of the current
global education need--billions needing instruction--means that no system of
learning that requires live instruction--whether face to face or at a
distance--can begin to make appreciable inroads.

Thus you reject or criticize most distance learning schemes, built as they
are around live teachers who teach 30 or 300 or 3000 students, as being
irrelevant, distractions from real solutions to the problem of global
ignorance.

The Wiki movement, therefore, you would tend to see as part of the
pseudosolution.

Recently you have incorporated into your thinking the belief that the newer
voice-based technologies would allow illiterate students to converse with
intelligent software in their native language, and be guided by that
software to knowledge and skill.

You believe, therefore, that attention ought to be given to raising the
comparatively few millions of dollars that would be needed to create such
intelligent instructional programs, test and improve them, and put them to w
ork solving the world's educational problems.

Alfred, am I at all close?

Steve Eskow

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Alfred Bork" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'The Digital Divide Network discussion group'"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 02, 2005 1:32 PM
Subject: RE: [DDN] FW: [NIFL-HEALTH:4627] Adult Literacy education Wiki


>
> Yes, Siobhan, I have looked at the wiki. My comment about personal
> experiences was not referring to the content of the wiki, but rather to
the
> idea that it was going to help solve the major problem of adult literacy.
>
> What is missing is any use of interaction and personalization, critical
> ingredients for learning. Librarians sometime think that one need only
> display the knowledge, but for most people this is not sufficient for
> learning.
>
> I would be happy to send to readers my proposal on literacy. It is
intended
> for young children, but the ideas could often extend to adults. Learning
> would be highly adaptive to the individual learner.
>
>
>
>
> Alfred
>
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