{"title":"新兴的读写能力:提出关于计算机技术在发展中国家教育和社会中的地位的问题:以津巴布韦为例","authors":"K. Hungwe","doi":"10.4314/ZJH.V29I2.6724","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"77iis article discusses the meaning of literacy in a technologically changing world. The rapidly expanding use of computer technologies in society has prompted calls for the re-orientation of education and training curricula. TJiis article critically examines what it means to be literate in the computer age and assesses the feasibility of setting 'computer literacy' as an educational goal. Throughout the discussion, the term 'computer literacy' appears in quotes to make the point that its meaning is both contentious and fluid. It is contended that Zimbabwean policy makers have tended to presume the value of computers, without critically examining how the technologies relate to education and society. The Origins of Computing Technologies Computer technologies emerged from the information and analytic requirements of advanced industrial societies during and after the Second World War. Computers were the perfect answer to the increasing demand for enhanced data processing capabilities. According to Berman, Wartime national mobilization, the Cold War, the rapid post-1945 expansion of the welfare state, and the growth of more interventionist state policies of economic planning and management in 'mixed' economies all led to the rapid growth of the state bureaucracies, civil and military, and an increasing burden of 'number crunching' tabulations. The first electronic computer was commissioned in 1946 at the University of Pennsylvania. It was called the ENIAC (Electronic Integrator and Automatic Computer), and it filled a room the size of a small two-bedroom house. ENIAC's memory was tiny and could only hold twenty 10-digit numbers. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
77 .这篇文章讨论了在技术变化的世界中识字的意义。计算机技术在社会上的迅速普及促使人们呼吁重新确定教育和培训课程的方向。他的文章批判性地考察了在计算机时代识字意味着什么,并评估了将“计算机素养”作为教育目标的可行性。在整个讨论中,“计算机素养”一词出现在引号中,以表明其含义既有争议又不稳定。有人认为,津巴布韦的政策制定者倾向于假定计算机的价值,而没有批判性地研究这些技术与教育和社会的关系。计算机技术的起源计算机技术在第二次世界大战期间和之后出现在先进工业社会的信息和分析需求中。计算机是对增强数据处理能力日益增长的需求的完美答案。根据伯曼的说法,战时的国家动员、冷战、1945年后福利国家的快速扩张,以及在“混合”经济中经济计划和管理的更多干预主义国家政策的增长,都导致了国家官僚机构(民事和军事)的快速增长,以及“数字碾压”表的负担日益增加。第一台电子计算机于1946年在宾夕法尼亚大学投入使用。它被称为ENIAC(电子集成商和自动计算机),它占据了一个有两个卧室的小房子那么大的房间。ENIAC的内存很小,只能容纳20个10位数的数字。到1960年,微电子技术的发展,特别是B. J. Berman, 1992年,“国家、计算机和非洲发展:信息非革命”,载于S. Grant Lewis和J. Samoff主编的《非洲发展中的微型计算机:批判视角》,Westview: Boulder, & Co.: 218页。
Emergent Literacies: Raising Questions about the Place of Computer Technologies in Education and Society in a Developing Country: The Case of Zimbabwe
77iis article discusses the meaning of literacy in a technologically changing world. The rapidly expanding use of computer technologies in society has prompted calls for the re-orientation of education and training curricula. TJiis article critically examines what it means to be literate in the computer age and assesses the feasibility of setting 'computer literacy' as an educational goal. Throughout the discussion, the term 'computer literacy' appears in quotes to make the point that its meaning is both contentious and fluid. It is contended that Zimbabwean policy makers have tended to presume the value of computers, without critically examining how the technologies relate to education and society. The Origins of Computing Technologies Computer technologies emerged from the information and analytic requirements of advanced industrial societies during and after the Second World War. Computers were the perfect answer to the increasing demand for enhanced data processing capabilities. According to Berman, Wartime national mobilization, the Cold War, the rapid post-1945 expansion of the welfare state, and the growth of more interventionist state policies of economic planning and management in 'mixed' economies all led to the rapid growth of the state bureaucracies, civil and military, and an increasing burden of 'number crunching' tabulations. The first electronic computer was commissioned in 1946 at the University of Pennsylvania. It was called the ENIAC (Electronic Integrator and Automatic Computer), and it filled a room the size of a small two-bedroom house. ENIAC's memory was tiny and could only hold twenty 10-digit numbers. By 1960, developments in microelectronics, and in particular the B. J. Berman, 1992, 'The state, computers, and African development: The information non-revolution', in S. Grant Lewis & J. Samoff eds, Microcomputers in African Development: Critical Perspectives, Westview: Boulder, & Co.: 218.