It is undeniable that we live in an age that is dominated by technology. Those of us in our mid-30s can remember as far back as BEFORE the internet when there were mass relay chat sites and/or BBS boards. I remember getting AOL 1.0 with the key logo and the whole dial-up mess sound and how amazing I thought it all was.
Needless to say, the world our children were born into is way more advanced than we ever knew.
I have started teaching DS (who is 3) how to use the computer. On top of owning a PC, I also have a Dell Mini laptop which I have found has been easy to use with my son. I have a small mouse that fits in his hand perfectly that I use with the laptop (since I am an old lady and get confused with the touch pad, lol) and we have been working on learning how to point and click and navigate websites. Currently we visit the standard "kid sites": sproutonline.com, pbskids.com, nationalgeographic.com, and many others and after a few lessons, DS has gotten the hang on how to work the mouse and point and click. He is now able to navigate a simple site on his own and, as long as he remembers the placement of his hand on the mouse, can play an actual game on said site. He does sometimes get confused and shuts down the comp somehow, though.
We also have an ancient (read 1996) laptop that is by all intents and purposes broken, that we let him type on and learn his letters and hand placement on a QWERTY board. I figure, better get him learning now, because when I was in busting my butt in college and beyond, there was no such thing as a laptop and I first started out with a typewriter and then moved on to this GIGANTIC Brother word processor that weighed about 15 pounds and used these ink cartridges that would get black all over your hands if you touched them wrong. If DS is going to follow into my nerd footsteps, he's going to be writing lots of papers and essays, lol.
Do your kids "play" on the computer? Are you preparing them for the super tech world we live in?
Musings from the Crypt: The Confessions of an Aging Goth Mom
It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in
delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
-Carl Sagan
CLUB 100