Taking the internet seriously

On Friday, Thomas Friedman sent in another column from Singapore.  The column begins with the words “Singapore is a country that takes the Internet seriously,” and ends with “…American parents had better understand that the people who are eating their kids' lunch in math are not resting on their laurels.” 

In between, Friedman writes about math and science education in Singapore, and specifically an online math teaching program called HeyMath whose “library of animated online lessons, interactive activities and assessment modules” helps both teachers and students.

Friedman's The World Is Flat also focused on how the internet is changing the world, and had the same implicit message as his recent column from Singapore:  America is falling farther and farther behind, in part because it doesn't take the internet seriously.

How would we take the internet seriously?  We'd understand that the nondiscriminatory, layered model of internet communications has made enormous economic growth possible, and we'd do anything we could to stop bills like Barton-Dingell from becoming law.  We'd celebrate the power and innovation unleashed by the internet rather than (or at least in addition to) condemning the spam and spyware that travel online.  And we'd subsidize builders of broadband networks in exchange for agreements not to engage in higher-level packet meddling.

The internet takes us very seriously.  It reflects the best (and, sometimes, worst) of humanity, and it keeps creating better and more interesting metainformation about society.  Surely this should be a two-way street.

[Thanks to GreaterDemocracy blog]

 

 

Comments

4 Responses to “Taking the internet seriously”

  1. Anonymous on September 19th, 2005 7:38 am

    yay, first post :) Two things confused me about this.
    1) How is not taking the -internet- seriously? The examples seem to be about taking interactivity and possibly games seriously in teaching. Something that the Serious Games movement is taking on in the West. The internet seems to be nothing more than a delivery mechanism, they could equally take FedEx seriously.
    2) A quote in the piece says: “Our lessons contain animated visuals that remove the abstraction underlying the concept

  2. Anonymous on September 19th, 2005 2:50 pm

    My question is more basic. How can we take Tom Friedman seriously?

  3. Anonymous on September 19th, 2005 10:20 pm

    Hi, glad to see you!
    Tom Friedman's idea of taking the internet seriously (the lead of his article) doesn't necessarily connect, I agree, to the body of his article! So I was taking that idea out of context. you're right. And I wish you had tought me math. Susan

  4. Anonymous on September 19th, 2005 10:21 pm

    Hi, James! Okay, you've got me — I thought everyone took Friedman seriously. That moustache.

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