User talk:Mchua: Difference between revisions
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==Hi, Mchua== |
==Hi, Mchua== |
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It's a good idea for me and my Korean fellows. I will have some tea time to discuss the agenda with my fellows and leave messages here in one or two days... cheers [[User:Php5|php5]] 23:09, 14 July 2007 (EDT) |
It's a good idea for me and my Korean fellows. I will have some tea time to discuss the agenda with my fellows and leave messages here in one or two days... cheers [[User:Php5|php5]] 23:09, 14 July 2007 (EDT) |
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== Content Jam - Nepal == |
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Thank you for your interest and willingness to help. It would be great if you share the experiences and contents of "Manila Jam". My irc nick is shankar. [[User:Shankar|Shankar]] 14:07, 15 July 2007 (EDT) |
Revision as of 18:07, 15 July 2007
A belated...
Welcome!
Welcome to the One Laptop per Child wiki. Please make yourself at home; read through the Table of Contents and FAQ, and take a look around. If you need a general wiki-tutorial, Wikieducator has some excellent ones.
Some possible pages of interest:
Feel free to leave me a note on my talk page if you have further questions or need help finding your way around.
Cheers, Sj
Yellow... yellow soy milk?
Notes from conversation with taxi driver 5/6/07
Taxi driver: Math is scary
- Untrained people who don't know the math behind what they're doing can often build better things than engineers who know the mathematics can.
- People already know physics intuitively, even if they don't have formal education.
- When you start using math to describe physics, you start scaring people away because the math is so foreign (and besides they often don't need to know the math to do things, as noted above).
- You can't do "higher-level" physics without math.
- Therefore, we can't teach some folks physics because it will scare them away (maybe even scaring them away from the physics they already know).
Ian and Mel: Math is not scary
- There is a way to do math without scaring people!
- Physical intuition is very important!
- Math is just a language we use to describe the predictions and observations we make about physics.
- People tend to not be scared away by things they already know. If we can teach people stuff by putting it in the context of things they already know, we can be much less scary.
- We want to start with the intuition people already have about the physical world, so the math makes sense in context, it's motivated by something.
- You can start with very simple mathematics to describe things. For instance, F=ma can be translated "If something is more massive (probably "heavy" in common speech) you have to push it harder to get it to go faster." This is basically variable naming.
- After variable naming you can move into quantization ("more massive" becomes "35 kilograms" and "push" becomes "3 Newtons") and then addition, multiplication, etc. but the math is motivated by what you need to describe (in fact, a lot of math, such as most of vector calc, was created so that we could describe stuff happening in physics.)
- Sometimes you can't just try things with physical intuition; for instance, if you are trying to work with something very big/heavy/dangerous you can't necessarily afford to make a mistake, you need to find out through calculation how it will behave first.
Hi from Lauren
Stumbled across your Curriculum Projects page and poked around-- looks like we're working on a lot similar things. I'm in Cambridge until the end of June, and with OLPC full-time through August. Let's talk! Lauren 12:30, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
- I wonder if there would be interest in periodic "olpc content" get-togethers in Cambridge? Either user-group model or periodic dinner model. MitchellNCharity 14:10, 12 June 2007 (EDT)
User page templates
Thoughts?
Minirelease?
Is there still a minirelease scheduled for today? I could kick in a simple 'shows a ruler and cm/mm grids' activity. Otherwise I'll aim for CR1. Cheers, MitchellNCharity 12:24, 25 June 2007 (EDT) (Feel free to delete once seen.)
O^2
cf. Organizing organizing --> a good foundation for intern coordination.
Related todo: a mesh of tasks (existing, published), and of places to collate them.
RE: Thanks for the wiki help!
- follow-up to User talk:Xavi#Thanks for the wiki help!
The goof? I was lucky... I had seen the talk page in recent changes, but then I noticed a red link in the page... :)
As for Xoxo I'm sure SJ would like the extra pair of hands (me too, but SJ is the father of the beast ;) Currently, I'm torn appart between off-olpc duties and trying to make a wiki parser for automatic stats and highlights (we'll see how it works) maybe I'll have something ready for this weekend... but still, we are lacking a review on the mailing lists (although I think User:MitchellNCharity and User:RafaelOrtiz were going to give a hand... :) Most definitely a summary or highlight of the 1cc community front would be welcome (I'd really like to hear what's being shuffled over there :) Cheers, --Xavi 17:57, 12 July 2007 (EDT)
check out ben's page for a mentorship/internship
User_talk:Bnardone and subpages. we should ping him... Sj talk 19:22, 13 July 2007 (EDT)
Hi, Mchua
It's a good idea for me and my Korean fellows. I will have some tea time to discuss the agenda with my fellows and leave messages here in one or two days... cheers php5 23:09, 14 July 2007 (EDT)
Content Jam - Nepal
Thank you for your interest and willingness to help. It would be great if you share the experiences and contents of "Manila Jam". My irc nick is shankar. Shankar 14:07, 15 July 2007 (EDT)