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The Computer Clubhouse: Technological Fluency in the Inner City


Citation Cooke, Stina, Natalie Rusk and Mitchel Resnick. 2003. The Computer Clubhouse: Technological Fluency in the Inner City
Author/Editor Mitchel Resnick, Natalie Rusk, Stina Cooke
Publication Date 2003
Copyright Mitchel Resnick
Language English
Document Type Paper/Essay
File Type and Size application/pdf/147.81 KB
Description Ever since the personal computer was invented in the late 1970s, there have been concerns about inequities in access to this new technology (e.g., Piller, 1992). In an effort to address these
inequities, some groups have worked to acquire computers for inner-city schools. Other groups
have opened community-access centers, recognizing that schools are not the only (or necessarily
the best) place for learning to occur. At these community-access centers, members of inner-city
communities (youth and adults alike) can use computers at little or no charge.

The Computer Clubhouse (organized by The Computer Museum in collaboration with the MIT
Media Laboratory) grows out of this tradition, but with important differences. At many other
centers, the main goal is to teach youth basic computer techniques (such as keyboard and mouse
skills) and basic computer applications (such as word processing). The Clubhouse views the
computer with a different mindset. The point is not to provide a few classes to teach a few skills;
the goal is for participants to learn to express themselves fluently with new technology.

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