Hai.My name is Ganesh.I am 12 years old.In India and in the school which I study the Computer Syllabus is horrible.The books teach only about Microsoft Windows and MS Office.And the teachers don't do anything about it.I hate
it.But what to do?<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 8/23/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Alain Muls</b> <<a href="mailto:alain.muls@telenet.be">alain.muls@telenet.be</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On Wednesday 23 August 2006 14:02, <a href="mailto:ubuntu-users-request@lists.ubuntu.com">ubuntu-users-request@lists.ubuntu.com</a><br>wrote:<br>> > On Wed, 2006-08-23 at 13:02 +0200, Sylvain Girard wrote:<br>> > > I think the issue is that the kids learn to use office in school. How
<br>> > > close the openoffice functionality is to the ms office functionality,<br>> > > the interface isn't quite the same.<br>> ><br>> > If your kids can find their way around Office, then can't find their way
<br>> > around OpenOffice, then they shouldn't be using the computer at all.<br>> > Seriously.<br>> ><br>> > You are making an issue out of something that simply isn't an issue at<br>> > all. You would never claim that they will not be able to use
<br>> > Firefox/Konqueror/Epiphany/Galeon/SeaMonkey/Mozilla/Opera/Netscape<br>> > because they have already learned IE, right?<br>><br>> Don't jump on the OP for the idiocy of the educational system. In the
<br>> U.K., it's the same. The teachers know nothing whatsoever about<br>> computers and just drill the students on step-by-step menu pecking in<br>> Microsoft Office and Windows, which the students then need to<br>
> regurgitate to pass the national tests.<br>><br>> We're Windows-free at our house too and it's a problem. We have a Mac<br>> (and two Linux PCs), so at least they have some place to memorize the<br>> useless information about Word and Excel. But I'm making sure the kids
<br>> can also do the same things in OpenOffice and try to expose them to a<br>> bit more about computers. One of them has taken an interest in Python,<br>> for example.<br>><br>> But it's a constant uphill battle. The schools are, more and more,
<br>> locked into long-term, overpriced contracts to offer rented Windows<br>> computers. None of the universities that my eldest daughter<br>> investigated even offered Macs, and she's looking at *art* schools.<br>
> Geezum. It's enough to drive you to despair.<br><br>I totally agree with this opinion. It is a drill they need to reproduce<br>without thinking. And it is not unlike Alan replied in another message that<br>my eldest cannot use OpenOffice, he does btw since he has dutch spelling and
<br>a dutch interface there, while Word/Excel is English and I do not have the<br>spelling dictionaries.<br><br>I hope it will change since Belgium recently adopted the open document format,<br>but I am afraid that there will be NO change in the educational system.
<br><br>The teachres do not want to investigate in OpenOffice even if they get the<br>opportunity to distribute the exact same version, whatever OS, to ALL their<br>students. How is this in other countries?<br><br><br>> I can see why people
<br>> resort to home schooling...<br>><br>> Sorry for the off-topic rant. It's something that has really bothered<br>> me for years. I'd join any effort to change that, but it's an<br>> incredibly high barrier right now in the
U.K. and getting higher.<br><br>--<br><br>mvg/Alain<br><br>________________________________________________________<br>Alain Muls Tel +32.2.7426340<br>Royal Military Academy Fax +32.2.7426472
<br>Dep CISS-ASGE <a href="mailto:alain.muls@telenet.be">alain.muls@telenet.be</a><br>________________________________________________________<br><br>--<br>ubuntu-users mailing list<br><a href="mailto:ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com">
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