Children's Reviews of OLPC XO Technology (OLPC News)
[Posted August 13, 2007 by jake]
One Laptop Per Child News reports
on several children's reviews of the XO. "Note that Gabe had
never seen one of these things before, and with practically no help from
the adults, he had started painting, typing, and playing with the webcam,
cackling quite evilly the whole time."
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Children's Reviews of OLPC XO Technology (OLPC News)
Posted Aug 14, 2007 7:42 UTC (Tue) by xoddam (subscriber, #2322)
[Link]
I can't say the XO is doing much for those kids' posture...
Children's Reviews of OLPC XO Technology (OLPC News)
Posted Aug 14, 2007 16:02 UTC (Tue) by drag (subscriber, #31333)
[Link]
Ya.. that's a concern for me also. Laptops are notoriously bad as far as ergonomics go.
sure, sure on the road or for a little bit the trackpad and keyboard on them is fine, but it's really damaging to use them for a long time. If I was to use a laptop as my main PC I'd be sure to have a dock, bluetooth, or other thing were I can easily use a separate keyboard and mouse.
In the pictures the kids are using them flat on the ground.. the wrist bending up like that is _very_ bad. It's ok to be sitting on the ground, but the laptop needs to be up on something so that it's even with the elbows when they are at the children's side. That way that puts lot less strain on their developing joints.
Children's Reviews of OLPC XO Technology (OLPC News)
Posted Aug 14, 2007 17:57 UTC (Tue) by dlang (subscriber, #313)
[Link]
so does this mean that kids should not be given laptops because they may not use them 'properly' from an ergonomic point of view?
Children's Reviews of OLPC XO Technology (OLPC News)
Posted Aug 14, 2007 21:43 UTC (Tue) by leoc (subscriber, #39773)
[Link]
Kids play with everything on the floor like that. I don't think ergonomics is something you really need to worry about until you spend a significant amount of time doing 1 thing and only 1 thing in a fixed position.
What the OLPC is for
Posted Aug 15, 2007 20:48 UTC (Wed) by BrucePerens (subscriber, #2510)
[Link]
The OLPC is a vehicle for the delivery of electronic textbooks, There are lots of children in the world who will not get access to a textbook any other way, and they need OLPC. But at the same time, giving young kids, especially kids who aren't yet good readers with good penmanship, a computer is not necessarily a good idea. I'd hate to see them playing video games before they can read, there are some learning opportunities the brain is wired for when a child is very young that can't be replaced. So when I saw these pictures, what I thought was not my kid.
Some of us, although we are immersed in computers daily, do not encourage our kids to use them because we don't believe they necessarily enhance early childhood education. With a 7-year-old at home we're not allowing video games, or the viewing of commercial TV channels, spectator sports, or religious programming. He'll have time enough for those later on.
Bruce
wee ones
Posted Aug 19, 2007 19:30 UTC (Sun) by grouch (subscriber, #27289)
[Link]
Some of us, although we are immersed in computers daily, do not encourage our kids to use them because we don't believe they necessarily enhance early childhood education. With a 7-year-old at home we're not allowing video games, or the viewing of commercial TV channels, spectator sports, or religious programming. He'll have time enough for those later on.
Please excuse me for stating the obvious, but different situations require different responses. While not quite as obvious, it is reasonable to assume that you are in the best position to determine how to handle your 7-year-old's situation. Let's hope no one takes your short list as a blanket recipe and ignores your leading qualifier of "[s]ome of us". ;)
My own situation while raising 2 children was undoubtedly different from yours. A wide-open C-band satellite system provided nearly unlimited access to television programming. I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to be with each of my children as they watched television, almost every time they watched tv in their pre-school years. Instead of outright bans, I made certain to point out marketing tricks and other distortions of reality as they occurred in tv programming. It's amazing how a running, concurrent lecture about the flaws of many tv programs can somewhat immunize a child to bad marketing and lead to very selective tv viewing. (Bad marketing is hereby defined to be anything used to convince someone to buy something that is not necessary). The downside to this accompanied viewing is that I sat through far too much "Sesame Street" and "Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood" -- C-band at that time had a separate feed for each of 3 (or was it 4?) timezones for PBS. (A 3-year-old seems capable of viewing a repeat as if new). Thankfully, living in near-wilderness, the outdoors competed well with the television for the children's interest.
As to video games and computers, my response to my own children's desires for these things was not an outright ban, but rather a moderating influence. We take an intense, nearly obsessive interest in specific forms of play at different times as children. As the doctor told the worried young mother regarding the coin her child swallowed, "This, too, shall pass." It is my personal belief that such periods of intense interest should be limited only to the extent they preclude other explorations. (BTW, I consider fantasy "shooters" such as Doom to be not inherently harmful, in contrast to some video games I've seen which reward players for destructive behavior directed at fellow human beings).
Too much of just about anything can be harmful, any amount of some things can be harmful, and the lack of some things can be harmful. The primary audience (target, in market-speak) for the OLPC is suffering from a lack of access to information and communication that many of us take for granted. I suggest that the parent or guardian of each child who receives an OLPC box should be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary in specific instances, to be capable of limiting the time spent on that computer if it appears to be doing more harm than good.