Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like more traditional education for our daughter, one in which she won't be on an iPad or a Chromebook, but will work with good, old-fashioned books, papers and pencils. Suggestions? Thanks
Me too but we're into non-book education and want a school that works with stone tablets or scrolls.
I’ve heard stone tablets are pretty addictive. We prefer teaching using smoke signals.
More of a monosyllabic grunt household ourselves. Muh.
Anonymous wrote:Any AMI accredited Montessori school. You should start by age 3.
Anonymous wrote:Serious question: what are you going to do when your kid goes to college? All colleges use technology. All of them. You want to train your kid to use tech safely and correctly now rather than hope all works out later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
One of our biggest disappointments was going private only to find just as many screens. It's not Catholic, though.
Which private?
DP. Several privates use iPads or ChromeBooks or whatever. Purely as an example, Langley School does this. It is one reason we did not apply there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question: what are you going to do when your kid goes to college? All colleges use technology. All of them. You want to train your kid to use tech safely and correctly now rather than hope all works out later.
This is so dumb. I was born in 1981. As a child, most of my classmates were not good at using a computer. We didn't have cell phones or wifi internet until college. Yet all of us function fine in the technological world now. You don't need to turn kindergarteners into screen zombies for them to learn technology by the time they are adults.
this is so completely correct
plus the other post about formal logic being what's useful for programming - not flashing lights and touchscreens
"digital literacy" is one of the dumbest & most mendacious tropes to emerge in recent years - I wish the adults mouthing those words would describe the level of "expertise" they've attained for themselves
Anonymous wrote:Any AMI accredited Montessori school. You should start by age 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question: what are you going to do when your kid goes to college? All colleges use technology. All of them. You want to train your kid to use tech safely and correctly now rather than hope all works out later.
This is so dumb. I was born in 1981. As a child, most of my classmates were not good at using a computer. We didn't have cell phones or wifi internet until college. Yet all of us function fine in the technological world now. You don't need to turn kindergarteners into screen zombies for them to learn technology by the time they are adults.