Perhaps they haven't looked at the GCSE curriculum - I've been a computer-holic for almost 40 years, and it sent me into a coma of boredom!
Also, most experts or enthusiasts I think still prefer to do IT rather than teach it. My daughter had 5 IT teachers in one year - one took their coursework to Australia when he left, so she got very low marks. The next year I told her brother to email his coursework to me from school - needless to say, he didn't bother, the system crashed, no backup, no coursework, he too got very low marks. For my third child, it was very much a case of "You've got a free period - go and teach GCSE IT!" And this was in a school which is one of the very best in our town, and which I'd recommend to anyone - except for IT. And yet it can be exciting, school visits love looking at the old machines, looking at how components and machines work, putting pieces together, learning about the impact on business, on our social lives. Darn, this has turned into a rant. But I do find it so depressing! Dianne On Thu, 2010-08-26 at 07:10 +0100, alan c wrote: > or nearly that, anyway..... > > Article: > Royal Society opens inquiry into why kids hate tech > Lessons that is, not games, mobiles, Facebook: > > http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/08/25/royal_society_schools_computing/ > > 'exam results have shown computing subjects are failing to grab kids' > attention' -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/