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THE TIME-SHARE PENCIL
A Fantasy For Our
Times
by Jack Turner

After learning of a classroom in India that has
only one pencil for 30 students, I considered the parallels implied
for microcomputers in American schools. To provide a new perspective
on the problems and prospects of accommodating to computer use in
education, I have invented a fantasy. Johann Pestalozzi (1746-1827),
a forward-looking Swiss teacher has just received the response below
from the School Committee regarding his request for a classroom
set of pencils. (Although pencils as we know them had been developed
by 1565, these tools did not become commonly available until around
1800: technological advances were rapidly lowering the price per unit.)
Memorandum
TO: Johann Pestalozzi, Headmaster
FROM: School Finance Committee
RE: Your Request for Student Pencils, Classroom Set
We must regretfully respond that your request is denied. After careful
consideration of your unprecedented proposal to provide each student
with a pencil, the Committee has elected to purchase only one such unit
for use in your classroom. The rationale for the Committee decision
is enumerated below, followed by queries to which you must respond (triplicate)
after field-testing the pencil.
- A. Pencils are fragile and break down easily
owing to primitive technology.
- B. Acquisition of pencils in quantity leads inevitably
to requests for other expensive peripherals such as sharpeners, erasers,
tablets, etc.
- C. We cannot justify the expenditures for these
systems to patrons whose education was perceived as adequate without
any such paraphernalia.
- D. The Committee expressed doubt that students
would use the requested pencils for activities more substantial than
doodling or tic-tac-toe.
- E. We strongly suggest you reconsider your proposal
to allow students to use pencils to work ciphers and related mathematics.
Apart from the loss of requisite mental rigor implied by your position,
what will happen if students become dependent on pencils to solve
problems but cannot locate such in time of need?
- F. Appropriate usage of pencils presumes teachers
who know how to incorporate them into classroom activities. Yet very
few teachers have such skills; thus pencils would probably be relegated
to storerooms.
Within two weeks of the close of the annual school
session the Committee would like to receive your answers to the following
questions:
- 1. Does the requested apparatus have applications
in schooling beyond the working of ciphers?
- 2. Do you recommend the creation of a new discipline
of pencil literacy? If so, which of the present legitimate disciplines
should be dropped in order to accommodate the new course?
- 3. Is this "new tool" (as described by you) especially
useful for specific sub-groups of students, e.g. the particularly
dull or perhaps the brightest?
- 4. Do students from rich families having pencils
in the home distance themselves in achievement from those who do not?
In closing, sir, the Committee feels compelled to
remind you that Aristotle managed to become educated, quite satisfactorily,
in fact without benefit of pencil.
Jack Turner email turner@4j.lane.edu
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Is ICT integration proving harder than you thought?
We can help.
ICTPD.NET provides online resources and professional development to support the successful integration of ICT in learning. We can also help you with the development of a learning portal, online courses for teachers, students and professional groups and planning for ICT integration.
Home Page - Information Leaflet - email bj @ ictpd.net
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