Kirby writes -
Trying being highly verbose for a change, if you want me to even have a clue what your beef is with my pro-computers-in-education agenda. I'm going to stop butting heads with you until I at least have a better understanding of what gives you nightmares.
Thinking that what I have to say needs more verbiage is perhaps giving me too much credit. If you judge there to be little difference between holding the old Life magazine in one's hand, with its address label peeling, and retrieving an image of it from a database and viewing it on a computer screen than you would be correct in judging that I am saying very little. Art
If you judge there to be little difference between holding the old Life magazine in one's hand, with its address label peeling, and retrieving an image of it from a database and viewing it on a computer screen than you would be correct in judging that I am saying very little.
Art
There's a difference sure. Not all kids are lucky enough to have direct access to originals -- Vatican Library a case in point. What you get in cyberspace may well be "second best" in many cases. But then, considering the situation globally, the choice is often between "second best" and "none at all." Speaking of Shakespeare, I think the computer has brought us as close as we've ever come to Prospero's books. Check Google if the allusion isn't clear. Kirby
participants (2)
-
Arthur
-
Kirby Urner