On Tue, Feb 10, 2004 at 11:06:30AM -0600, Garrett Goebel wrote: > Bryan Richard wrote: > > > > I actually had something like this in High School. Pre-Internet, they > > hooked three classrooms up via video cameras and you watched > > televisions of the teacher and students from as far off as the next > > county. Woohoo! > > The teachers rotated each semester. > > > > Zero discipline, couldn't read the chalkboard, worksheets were faxed > > back back and forth, &c. This was high technology back then -- I don't > > recall computers be involved -- and I imagine that the video > > link cost a pretty penny. It would probably not take much more than > > a couple of modern PCs and an ISDN line to do the same thing now. > > > > Not an ideal way of handling the education of Seniors in High School, > > even if it was a bunch of nerds in AP Lit. I mowed through several > > Stephen Kings in that class. > > Sounds like failures in implementation. Could be but one wonders what the point was. Even the semi-rural area I grew up in had what would be considered excellent education when placed against the majority of what can be found overseas. > Australia is supposed to have pioneered solutions a lot of the > tele-education problems in order to improved the educational opportunities > in the outback. I'd be curious to hear what their implementation looks like. > Though I wouldn't be surprised if the same solution still wouldn't work with > America's undisciplined uninterested attention span challenged youth. -I > fell asleep in the classes when the teachers were present... We are what we are; such is the burden of being overprivileged. Had school challenged me more I probably would have stayed awaked but as it was leveled to include everyone $physics == "nap time" == "easy A." - Bryan