>  *Tony* - *"Having  a FOSS culture means that lots of smaller design
> decisions are made which empower the learner"*

Soren

I find it a bit strange being asked to explain FOSS culture. I run Windows on 
my computer and see myself as a little bit of an outsider.

It is, I guess, difficult to define FOSS culture, as well as having very fuzzy 
edges, it has a poorly defined centre.

Where Sugar and education is involved, its also tied up with ideas of 
constructivism and constructionism 

Constructivism has the learner as an active participant in their learning, 
constructing or reassembling concepts inside their head. Constructionism adds 
the idea of creating a project to share with others. From the outset, OLPC was 
a constructionist project. FOSS was a natural fit with constructionism as well 
as being cheap, an important issue for the developing world.

FOSS and constructionism both value sharing and cooperative endeavour. They 
both support the idea of individual autonomy, the freedom to use the ideas of 
others in ways that were not anticipated, they are both experimenter or hacker 
cultures. Its these ideas that the words you quote, [freedom, sharing and open 
critique ] likely refer to.

You ask whether Sugar users are part of the FOSS culture. Perhaps the questions 
are to what extent will they share the values of FOSS and to what extent they 
benefit from FOSS.

You mention Nepal. I know too little of OLPC Nepal to comment but others may be 
able to.

So for argument, lets consider a deployment where cultural and educational 
values were opposite to constructionism. To what extent would Sugar, coming 
from a constructionist/FOSS community alter the education experience for users? 
Students might have strongly scripted lessons with clearly defined assessment 
tasks. Computer use outside these tasks might be discouraged. 

The operating system would still have constructionist features such as 
collaboration and view source. (Though it would be possible for a local 
software build to lock these features.)  Children would still experiment and 
find many of the constructionist features. They would hack the system, as they 
do already with Windows, and would find it much easier to hack because it has 
been designed from the outset to be hackable. If they searched the net they 
would find lots of information to help them because the OLPC is open software 
and hardware.

So I expect that it is inevitable that Sugar users will to some extent be 
influenced by the values of FOSS and that the learning experience will be 
different because of FOSS.

Tony

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