On 9 October 2010 11:33, <[email protected]> wrote: > Quoting Edward Cherlin <[email protected]>: > >> I have a partial draft of a "textbook" on the subject at >> http://www.booki.cc/discovering-discovery/ It encourages XO owners to >> explore on their own and find out what questions they have before we >> give them answers. >> > > I like the idea. It encourages users to jump in and take risks, experiment, > not worry if they have incomplete understanding. >
Me too, and have added some feedback to NZ educators on why open source can aid education in ways that closed source can't[1]. >From [1]: Here is one way that I can think that that open source benefits learners, based only on my own experience however. What I've witnessed from many computer uses is a sense of frustration and helplessness when something doesn't work as they think it should. People who buy software are trained to wait for automatic updates, or worse they are forced onto purchasing the next version. Processes inside organisations say, "If you're having problems, call the helpdesk."* The feedback loop might be an automated report that is generated and sent to an anonymous server. I would like to think that open source software would enable a sense of critical analysis, exploration and problem solving. For me, when I have a problem with a piece of software that I use, I tend to go through a process of reflection: "Is this issue something other people might be having?" "Can I reproduce the problem?" "Why is the system built like this, there must be a reason? It must be useful for something." "Is the hassle of the computer problem larger than the hassle of my time to send feedback?" "How can I word a report to developers that explains what's going wrong?" In short, I have the impression that users of paid software feel like they don't have the skills to contribute. They don't see themselves as a participant in a computer system. By computer system, I mean a system that includes software, hardware and the user to generate some useful output. Open source software has helped me by creating a sense of empowerment and discovery. I use the software that I want to run. When there's a problem, my involvement forms part of the solution. [1] http://groups.google.com/group/mle-reference-group/browse_thread/thread/3caf7421439020d6 (scroll to bottom)
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