Re: [IAEP] Computer ClubHouse at the Boston Museum of Science

2009-10-22 Thread Mike Lee
Cici, Amy and I finally got out to visit one of our local Intel Computer
Clubhouses. The manager, Alvaro Luna, runs four of them in Fairfax County,
Virginia. Alvaro came to our OLPC Learning Club meeting at the Arlington
Career Center back in September when Adam and SJ were in town and we all had
some robust conversation.

This group of Clubhouses is staffed and funded by Fairfax County Government
with additional funds from the Equal Footing Foundation for robotics
competitions. The clubhouse runs solely Windows-based machines as far as I
could tell. Alvaro actively uses Scratch, PicoCrickets and Lego Mindstorms.
The after school activities of the clubhouses seem like an ideal place to
jumpstart the use of Sugar on a Stick and promote the OLPC Contributor's
Program. Alvaro was eager and completely open to conspiring on some
projects.

I am mystified as to why there is only one Computer Clubhouse in
Maryland--Baltimore. While I really enjoy the vibe and people in NOVA, I'm
also going to try to amp up some activity in my local neighborhood of
Wheaton, MD in Montgomery County. Cici's school teaches basic Scratch
lessons and they are eager to have me involved.

My photos of the Fairfax Computer Clubhouse:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/curiouslee/tags/intelcomputerclubhousenetwork/

Press:
http://www.fairfaxlibraryfoundation.org/news/news062505.htm
http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS122138+14-Apr-2009+MW20090414

Mike



On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 10:58 AM, Mike Lee curious...@gmail.com wrote:

 One of these Computer Clubhouses is in Arlington, VA, not far from Sugar
 Labs DC. Maybe the Boston flagship can do an intro for us?

 Mike

 Sent from my iPhone


 On Aug 16, 2009, at 10:48 AM, Sean DALY sdaly...@gmail.com wrote:

  This seems like a perfect fit!

 Sean


 On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 2:58 AM, Caroline
 Meekscarol...@solutiongrove.com wrote:

 http://www.computerclubhouse.org/
 The Computer Clubhouse is
 an international network of computer centers for youth.  Their flagship
 clubhouse is housed in the Museum of Science in Boston
 and they were kind enough to host us for two days this week.
 Keith has also mentioned that he would be able to host evening Geek
 meetups/hack sessions at the clubhouse.  I am copying OLPC Boston to see
 if
 there would be interest in moving from our meetup location from the
 coffee
 shop to this computer heaven in the coolest museum in Boston. :) (Sorry,
 I
 literately grew up at the Boston Museum of Science and the Berkeley
 Lawrence
 Hall of Science and just love science museums)
 Today we worked with 8 kids from Cambridge that had been coming to the
 clubhouse one day a week over the summer.
 The computer clubhouse provides professional level software for the kids
 to
 create with. Tens of thousands of dollars are spent on proprietary
 software
 and the kids do great things. Their favorite when I asked at the
 beginning
 of class seemed to be Garage Band.
 I asked these students if any of them had a computer at home.  They all
 did.
 In fact, some had a mac and a PC in their house.  I asked them if any of
 them had taken anything they had done at the clubhouse and continued to
 work
 on it at home. NONE of them had.
 The club
 houses are doing great things but the impact on the students lives and
 learning is limited to the time they are spending there.  One
 potential of Sugar on a Stick is to
 allow students to keep working and exploring beyond their few hours in
 computer paradise and have them not lose access
 when their program ends.
 Walter has met with the Auckland Clubhouse people and they were also
 interested in Sugar.  They might be a great partner.

 --
 Caroline Meeks
 Solution Grove
 carol...@solutiongrove.com

 617-500-3488 - Office
 505-213-3268 - Fax

 ___
 IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
 IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
 http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep

  ___
 IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
 IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
 http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep


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Re: [IAEP] Computer ClubHouse at the Boston Museum of Science

2009-08-16 Thread Sean DALY
This seems like a perfect fit!

Sean


On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 2:58 AM, Caroline
Meekscarol...@solutiongrove.com wrote:
 http://www.computerclubhouse.org/
 The Computer Clubhouse is
 an international network of computer centers for youth.  Their flagship clubhouse is housed in the Museum of Science in Boston
 and they were kind enough to host us for two days this week.
 Keith has also mentioned that he would be able to host evening Geek
 meetups/hack sessions at the clubhouse.  I am copying OLPC Boston to see if
 there would be interest in moving from our meetup location from the coffee
 shop to this computer heaven in the coolest museum in Boston. :) (Sorry, I
 literately grew up at the Boston Museum of Science and the Berkeley Lawrence
 Hall of Science and just love science museums)
 Today we worked with 8 kids from Cambridge that had been coming to the
 clubhouse one day a week over the summer.
 The computer clubhouse provides professional level software for the kids to
 create with. Tens of thousands of dollars are spent on proprietary software
 and the kids do great things. Their favorite when I asked at the beginning
 of class seemed to be Garage Band.
 I asked these students if any of them had a computer at home.  They all did.
 In fact, some had a mac and a PC in their house.  I asked them if any of
 them had taken anything they had done at the clubhouse and continued to work
 on it at home. NONE of them had.
 The club
 houses are doing great things but the impact on the students lives and learning is limited to the time they are spending there.  One
 potential of Sugar on a Stick is to
 allow students to keep working and exploring beyond their few hours in computer paradise and have them not lose access
 when their program ends.
 Walter has met with the Auckland Clubhouse people and they were also
 interested in Sugar.  They might be a great partner.

 --
 Caroline Meeks
 Solution Grove
 carol...@solutiongrove.com

 617-500-3488 - Office
 505-213-3268 - Fax

 ___
 IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
 IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
 http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep

___
IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep


Re: [IAEP] Computer ClubHouse at the Boston Museum of Science

2009-08-16 Thread Mike Lee
One of these Computer Clubhouses is in Arlington, VA, not far from  
Sugar Labs DC. Maybe the Boston flagship can do an intro for us?

Mike

Sent from my iPhone

On Aug 16, 2009, at 10:48 AM, Sean DALY sdaly...@gmail.com wrote:

 This seems like a perfect fit!

 Sean


 On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 2:58 AM, Caroline
 Meekscarol...@solutiongrove.com wrote:
 http://www.computerclubhouse.org/
 The Computer Clubhouse is
 an international network of computer centers for youth.  Their  
 flagship clubhouse is housed in the Museum of Science in Boston
 and they were kind enough to host us for two days this week.
 Keith has also mentioned that he would be able to host evening Geek
 meetups/hack sessions at the clubhouse.  I am copying OLPC Boston  
 to see if
 there would be interest in moving from our meetup location from the  
 coffee
 shop to this computer heaven in the coolest museum in Boston. :)  
 (Sorry, I
 literately grew up at the Boston Museum of Science and the Berkeley  
 Lawrence
 Hall of Science and just love science museums)
 Today we worked with 8 kids from Cambridge that had been coming to  
 the
 clubhouse one day a week over the summer.
 The computer clubhouse provides professional level software for the  
 kids to
 create with. Tens of thousands of dollars are spent on proprietary  
 software
 and the kids do great things. Their favorite when I asked at the  
 beginning
 of class seemed to be Garage Band.
 I asked these students if any of them had a computer at home.  They  
 all did.
 In fact, some had a mac and a PC in their house.  I asked them if  
 any of
 them had taken anything they had done at the clubhouse and  
 continued to work
 on it at home. NONE of them had.
 The club
 houses are doing great things but the impact on the students lives  
 and learning is limited to the time they are spending there.  One
 potential of Sugar on a Stick is to
 allow students to keep working and exploring beyond their few hours  
 in computer paradise and have them not lose access
 when their program ends.
 Walter has met with the Auckland Clubhouse people and they were also
 interested in Sugar.  They might be a great partner.

 --
 Caroline Meeks
 Solution Grove
 carol...@solutiongrove.com

 617-500-3488 - Office
 505-213-3268 - Fax

 ___
 IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
 IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
 http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep

 ___
 IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
 IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
 http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
___
IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep


[IAEP] Computer ClubHouse at the Boston Museum of Science

2009-08-13 Thread Caroline Meeks
http://www.computerclubhouse.org/
The Computer Clubhouse is
an international network of computer centers for youth.  Their
flagship clubhouse is housed in the Museum of Science in Boston
and they were kind enough to host us for two days this week.

Keith has also mentioned that he would be able to host evening Geek
meetups/hack sessions at the clubhouse.  I am copying OLPC Boston to see if
there would be interest in moving from our meetup location from the coffee
shop to this computer heaven in the coolest museum in Boston. :) (Sorry, I
literately grew up at the Boston Museum of Science and the Berkeley Lawrence
Hall of Science and just love science museums)

Today we worked with 8 kids from Cambridge that had been coming to the
clubhouse one day a week over the summer.

The computer clubhouse provides professional level software for the kids to
create with. Tens of thousands of dollars are spent on proprietary software
and the kids do great things. Their favorite when I asked at the beginning
of class seemed to be Garage Band.

I asked these students if any of them had a computer at home.  They all did.
In fact, some had a mac and a PC in their house.  I asked them if any of
them had taken anything they had done at the clubhouse and continued to work
on it at home. NONE of them had.

The club
houses are doing great things but the impact on the students lives and
learning is limited to the time they are spending there.  One
potential of Sugar on a Stick is to
allow students to keep working and exploring beyond their few hours in
computer paradise and have them not lose access
when their program ends.

Walter has met with the Auckland Clubhouse people and they were also
interested in Sugar.  They might be a great partner.

-- 
Caroline Meeks
Solution Grove
carol...@solutiongrove.com

617-500-3488 - Office
505-213-3268 - Fax
___
IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
IAEP@lists.sugarlabs.org
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep