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Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

Huh? Schools Think Kids Don't Want to Learn Computer Science | WIRED - 0 views

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    "...schools don't think the demand from parents and students is there. ..."
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

Studying the relationship between remixing & learning - copyrighteous - 0 views

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    "With more than 10 million users, the Scratch online community is the largest online community where kids learn to program. Since it was created, a central goal of the community has been to promote "remixing" - the reworking and recombination of existing creative artifacts. "
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

Why Vinyl Records and Other 'Old' Technologies Die Hard - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "Disruptions By NICK BILTON MARCH 16, 2016 Share This Page Photo Credit Ellen Weinstein For a glimpse of what teenagers are into these days, all you have to do is visit Abbot Kinney Boulevard in the Venice neighborhood of Los Angeles. On weekend nights, the half-mile shopping drag is packed with style-conscious kids who traipse past coffee shops, ice cream parlors and boutiques, often while taking selfies."
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

culture defined for kids » Merriam-Webster - 0 views

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    "c : the characteristic features of everyday life shared by people in a particular place or time " [Filial de Encyclopædia Britannica - en.wikipedia.org]
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

Chomsky: The Corporate Assault on Public Education | Alternet [# Via Note] - 0 views

    • Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.
       
      [# ! Via, TY, Maureen Kelsey's LinkedIn
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    Our kids are being prepared for passive obedience, not creative, independent lives. By Noam Chomsky / AlterNet March 8, 2013
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.

No es país para músicos [# ! Via Eme...] - 0 views

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    "El documental 'Kids used to sing' retrata la precariedad y el acoso que padece la música en vivo en las calles y salas de España"
François Dongier

collective iq - 7 views

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    ahh! you beat me to it, read this yesterday and was on my list.. thx
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    Not sure I buy the no-training-wheel argument though :-) Even if they impede the learning process, training wheels make it easy and safe to bike around at an early age.
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    well, I can tell from experience that the " "wibble-wobble method" works just fine (did with me as with my own youngsters). true enough, training wheels make it easy, however in the long run the ingrained habit of micro-steering as a way of enhancing one's capability to overcome apparent obstacles and innovate in and with the chaotic flow of events is quite the advantage.
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    There were no training wheels when I learned to ride a bike in AR - you learned or fell off - and, everyone that I knew learned on their own without any problems at all. Training wheels and the "wibble-wobble method" are manifestations of our over-protective (well-meaning, of course!) nature with our children from the 70s, 80s and 90s and now ... I used training wheels with my son until he insisted that I take them off, so he could ride like the other kids in the neighborhood that were younger and used no training wheels and rode better than he did. I'm encouraged by that recollection (if I remember it correctely? lol) to believe that training wheels are a bit of a waste of time and that the "wibble-wobble method" or other 'throw-in-th'-mix-and-see-what-happens' would serve the person better. Micro-steering must be learned no matter what at some point - the subtly of the motion of a bike require it.
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