
photo credit: Bud the Teacher #
I’m typically the guy who pays attention to the latest gadgets from a distance, reading up on them and learning about what they can or can’t do, but not striking on the first day of any new thing, for a number of reasons. For one, I’m cheap. I also don’t do well in lines or crowds. And buying most stuff on day one is buying into a public beta period, and often the better deal is a few weeks or months down the road as hardware is revised and software is tweaked. #
But I had an extra few minutes on Saturday around noon, and I had a hunch about Apple’s iPad inventory. Namely, I figured they’d have plenty of devices to fiddle with at the Best Buy on my way home from the gym. So, with Ani and Teagan along for company, I wandered in to take a look at Apple’s iPad, released earlier that day. #
I should interrupt my story here to tell you that, just prior to the visit to the store, I happened across this article on children and mobile devices for learning1, so I’m certain that my brain was thinking about my children and learning when we made it into the store. #
I spend lots of time thinking about how my kids and the kids in our schools will think, learn and live in a world that will be digitally quite different from the world I grew up in. And I find myself jumping back and forth from the positions of “It’s all the same – the stuff is different, but the world is the same place” and “Holy cow. There has never been a time or place like this one.”
#
And both are valid positions, but they coexist. I spend lots of time in the spaces between those two poles. I’m that guy who sees that there’s value in highly structured and sequenced learning as well as time for exploration and play without outwardly driven purpose. Most of the important things in life aren’t binary, they’re much more complex than that. And I digress. Still further. #
The implications of the iPad have weighed heavily on my mind this week, as I’ve read pieces like Cory Doctorow’s: #
Buying an iPad for your kids isn’t a means of jump-starting the realization that the world is yours to take apart and reassemble; it’s a way of telling your offspring that even changing the batteries is something you have to leave to the professionals. #Plenty of other folks have, in the last few days, said some pretty interesting things about the iPad either being the end of the world as we know it or the beginning of a new revolution of creativity and interactivity – and I’m just2 a dad trying to figure out how I want to introduce my daughters to the world of possibility and wonder that awaits them. I want them to tinker, to play, to explore and to dream. I want them to grab hold of the stuff of the world and make new from raw ingredients. #Dale Dougherty’s piece on Hypercard and its influence on a generation of young hackers is a must-read on this. I got my start as a Hypercard programmer, and it was Hypercard’s gentle and intuitive introduction to the idea of remaking the world that made me consider a career in computers. #
I worry that such making will happen in a locked down world, the world that Howard Zittrain saw when he wrote The Future of the Internet3, one where the generative devices that spawned the Internet become, like the iPad and the iPhone before it4, locked down and controlled by the people who make them, not the people who own them. #
And even as I say that the iPad is a locked down device, I know that there’s creative opportunity and potential from within constraints, and that what’s locked down may or may not be a problem so long as there’s still a space for open, so long as there’s a multi-platform world where the languages spoken by one ecosystem are understood by others. My iPhone is a powerful tool. I suspect the iPad is, too.
#
But again, I’m a dad who’s struggling to figure out how to bring his children into the world of information and digital stuff while keeping roots in the good stuff of language and learning and literacy that came before the digital. 5 #
When we entered the store and fidgeted in a short line to play with the demo iPads, the girls were not interested. In the line. The moment they could get to the iPad, then begun to touch and poke and pinch and explore. They were immersed in the content, in words and letter and pictures and touch this to do that. I was struck by how powerful the experience was for them, more so than a random kids-touch-the-buttons experience. They were trying, as they could, to make meaning. I got what reviewers meant when they said that using the iPad was like interacting directly with the content, and not with the device the content’s delivered through. And, again, I know that it was the article and the pressure and the fact that I was a little high on the Apple expectations myself. #
But I bought one. Against all my typical instincts and dispositions. Right then and there. What better lab for their experimentation? What father wouldn’t do such a thing? #
I came to my senses about ten minutes later, just before I had to try to explain to Ms. the Teacher just what it was that I did, and just why it was necessary. She’s my grounding influence oftentimes, and she reminded me of a few things. Namely, I’m cheap, my kids have access to lots of the analog and digital world already, and, well, it’s early yet. There’s more exploration for me to do before I’m sure this is a useful tool for my girls. The right tool. Or one of several, which is more likely. I returned the iPad, unopened, later that night. #
If you’ve made it this far, then you might be hoping this is the paragraph where I have the epiphany, the jewel that makes this experience worthwhile. And I’m so sorry to let you down. I’m finding that, often, there are few certainties when it comes to what technology is the right technology for helping kids to learn, or societies to remain free, or work to get done, or whatever it is that you want to make the tool do. #
But my kids and I are going to be exploring this world together in a way that is new for me. As Ani heads out to Kindergarten next school year, and as Teagan’s not far behind her, there’s lots of work for us to do as co-learners together. Gadgets and gizmos and questions and tinkering. There’s much to do. #
And there’re plenty of voices in the wilderness calling out to us with suggestions about how to do this thing. #
We’re listening. But I’m also remembering what Ani’s face looks like in that picture at the top of this post, her tongue set between her lips as she digs in, determined, to play, to explore, to make. That’s a learning face. That’s what we’re aiming for. #
- Written by Anya Kamenetz, who’s also written this book on DIY Education that I’m very much looking forward to reading. [↩]
- Just. I couldn’t understate the importance of that job more. [↩]
- Yes, that’s a wonderful book that you can download for free. Read it. Please. [↩]
- Two devices I find fascinating and yes, I use two iPhones. Daily. [↩]
- Language that, itself, is a tool and a technology, like books and magazines and pencils and pens and ink and pretty much everything that folks think about when they think about the “good old days.” It’s all technology. I know. [↩]
- Digital, analog, or otherwise [↩]
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Bud Hunt, Bud Hunt. Bud Hunt said: New blog post: Ani & the iPad or "Much Madness is the Father's Curse" http://bit.ly/bfSLnO [...]
I love that “learning face” when I see it on my own kids, too. I am not ready to plunge into the iPad mania, but I suspect someday, down the lines …
Kevin
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This post was mentioned on Twitter by budtheteacher: New blog post: Ani & the iPad or “Much Madness is the Father’s Curse” http://bit.ly/bfSLnO...
Having been a small part of your pre-iPad era discussion on this via Twitter, it’s interesting to see you oscillate back and forth between the two realities that you outlined. I agree completely with you that currently we live in two different worlds (or perhaps three if you consider the singular view our children have).
My children are not quite as old as yours I’m imagining from the photo (I have a 4 year old and a 4 month old), but since the iPad announcement I’ve been toying with the idea of getting my 4 year old at least an iPod Touch, for her to begin her own personal exploration. Which is funny, because I’m with you; I’m cheap! Give me a computer and a decent internet connection and I’m happy as a clam. I even returned a 37 inch LCD last year after owning it for just one week, realizing I had bought it in a rare fit of Christmas-fueled spending. I still use a 5 year old cellphone, and have yet to justify purchasing an iPhone due to the required data plan.
Yet the article you mentioned had wonderful examples of how making the technology personal and intimate can greatly enhance learning. I don’t think that just owning such technology will make our children smarter, but like you said, after witnessing your daughter’s face, they have the potential for opening up new avenues of learning that we never had access to when we were young.
I decided several weeks ago to jump in feet first. I figure I can try it out and see how I like it, and if for some reason it doesn’t work for me, I’ll sell it on Craigslist for a 50 dollar discount. I’m pretty confident I won’t lose more money than that by ‘renting’ one in this way.
And like you, I was very curious to see what Aiden would think about it, to see the perspective of a 3 year old. And I have to tell you, watching him interact with it was… disappointing it. It wasn’t magical to him it all. It was familiar, comfortable, just another touch screen. He knew exactly what to do with it from the second he grabbed it. He found games that were familiar, he played a few songs (random choices), and he watched the free Disney Toy Story book. There was no lightbulbs or rays of sunshine beaming down on him. It was just another device.
Now, he has already shown that he prefers it to the iPhone, and to be honest so do I. I look at the iPhone and wonder how I got by for so long on such a minuscule screen. But overall, that’s the thing that has struck me more than anything about this. It feels natural, it feels comfortable, and it’s convenient. Is that enough? I’ll get back to you on this one.
But I can tell you that just before his nap today, we loaded up the Toy Story book again. And this time, he asked me to read it (instead of the canned voices). So I did. And as I did, I recorded my own voice (a feature of the book). And now when we go back to that page, it plays my voice with the content. And he loves it.
Innovation? Maybe not. Certainly evolution.
My kids and I sat and played Scrabble on the iPad last night for over an hour. We played the “Pass ‘n Play” version, in which the iPad is circulated from player to player and one-another’s tiles are kept hidden from the other players. Neither boy had ever played the “real” Scrabble before, but they were really caught up in this last night. (There’s also an optional free app for the iTouch/iPhone that lets you see/manage your tile deck while sitting back — we didn’t progress that far.)
Now, I should say that Scrabble and I go way back, having played it years ago with my parents and aunts and grandmother and later, my siblings. We even have a manic backpackers’ variant called “Go” (played only using the tiles) that my aunts learned and brought back one year from a trip to New Zealand. Having always enjoyed both games, I was surprised in the past that neither boy had expressed interest in playing the full board game version of Scrabble. We’d only played “Go.”
After last night’s oh-so-sucessful introduction to the full game, I’m confident that they will be more interested in sitting down to a real round-the-table game of true Scrabble in the future. (“The iPad needs recharging, let’s use the real game.”)
Chalk one up for technology!
I am a high school teacher and a mom, and I want an iPad so badly I can feel it in my hands……I can imagine what my students could do with it too. But to respond to your experience: you are sooooo right, there is time for your girls. They really really need you now. They will not fall behind others if you wait. In fact, there will come the time when something like the iPad is EXACTLY what they need to magnify their learning and creativity. But for now, the emotional, social and intellectual stimulation that comes from secure guided loving life with dad…….well, you can’t beat it. I know I am old school, but my experience with three daughters, all between 18-22 now, proved that loving relationships modeled early and intensely set them up for marvelous fun and achievement later. There is no substitute for face time!!
…looks like iPhone OS4 will have a lot of the features of the ipad…including access to iBooks. I wonder what feature sets will stay unique to the iPad (beyond its size) that will keep it exciting and worth the higher price tag…
[...] “Ani & the iPad or ‘Much Madness is the Father’s Curse” by Bud Hunt (Blog, Twitter) at Bud the Teacher [...]
[...] “Ani & the iPad or ‘Much Madness is the Father’s Curse” by Bud Hunt (Blog, Twitter) at Bud the Teacher [...]