I could not agree more.  When do we begin practicing 'what is good for
my child is good for all children?  What I want for my child I want, and
will work for, for all children!'  

Sharon Valear Robinson, Ed.D.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alfred Bork
Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2005 10:38 AM
To: 'The Digital Divide Network discussion group'
Cc: Bonnie Bracey
Subject: RE: [DDN] dumping old computers in the developing world

This is a terrible practice - sending our garbage to the poor.

But new or old, computers will not be useful without software designed
for
applications relevant to the users. If they are illiterate, at any age,
the
first software they will need is that for developing literacy, in all
its
forms. Since each learner is unique, it should adapt to the individual
person. It is currently useless to connect an illiterate person to the
Internet, or to provide them with any existing computer tools.

Illiteracy is not just a problem in the poor countries. It is all too
common
in the United States. So this software is needed everywhere, in many
languages. Why is it not available now?



Alfred Bork

Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Science
University of California, Irvine

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