[10790] daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Gordon Cook) Commercialization & Privatization of the Internet 03/09/94 17:16 (60 lines) Subject: Summary of Ferdi Serim feature from March COOK Report From: cook@path.net (Gordon Cook) Date: Wed, 9 Mar 1994 15:57:37 GMT To: com-priv@psi.com Here is the remaining information on the lead story for the March COOK Report.....embargoed until this morning. Why? because Ferdi Serims appointment to the Princeton Regional Schools system is now official. Takes effect July 1, 1994. A major focus of our article is on what Ferdi hopes to accomplish there....where every school is on the internet via the local cable tv system at backbone speeds of 3 to 5 megabits per second. F. SERIM'S VISION OF REFORM PP.1 - 10, 17, & 19. We interview Ferdi Serim who as a 4th through 6th grade computer instructor at the West Windsor Plainsboro New Jersey Upper Elenentary School has his students "serfing" the internet with an aplomb seen only in relatively few high school programs in the nation. (Length about 12,000 words.) Ferdi tells us how he became a music teacher, an arts administrator, and established a personal-professional relationship with jazz great Dizzy Gillespie. Also, how almost by chance he traded his musical instuments for computers and telecommunications - while he learning to "play" them with great accomplishment. Part of his insight - that students should be producers as well as consumers of their education. His story shows how talent can be nurtured in an environment that encourages independence amount teachers and rewards risk taking. Our report is also the first announcement of his impending move from the West Windsor Plainsboro Schools to the Princeton Regional Schools. There he will begin to carry out an ambitious five year program that will use the Internet to transform the role of local education. His vision contains five parts: first continued teaching; second, teaching other teachers how to integrate the net into what they are doing; third, network curriculum development; fourth, intergrating the network and school system with the citizens of Princeton via four community-based network-attached after school and weekend homework centers; fifth, out reach via grants application and use of the school system's teachers to train local businesses in use of the network. Of course the irony of all this is that he is moving from a very well to do school district into one that is even better off. Ferdi is fully aware of problems of information rich and information poor. He has promised to provide us with some ideas on how this may be addressed in our April issue. In that issue we will also publish detailed information on the Princeton Regional Schools use of of cable tv to deliver the internet and the development of the community out reach homework centers. As Ferdi points out it may be time to bury the image of the information superhighway in favor of the grassroots, indigenous, community-developed and controled model that he has outlined. ___________________________________________________________________ Gordon Cook, Editor Publisher: COOK Report on Internet -> NREN 431 Greenway Ave, Ewing, NJ 08618 cook@path.net (609) 882-2572 Subcriptions: $500 corporate site license; $175 educational & non prof., $85 individ. ___________________________________________________________________ --[10790]--