« Teaching a Man to Fish With a Computer | Main | In which I answer all of the questions »
Hi, I'm Sara, and I've been a keyboard cowgirl since 1993.
I've been building software for over 10 years now, I'm currently enamored with all things JavaScript.
My role as CTO of Levo League has given me the privilege of working with an amazing group of coders to build something we all believe in.
In 2010 my friend Vanessa and I started Girl Develop It because we think that the development community could use a few more ladies.
In 2011 I worked with Melanie Moore to found Elizabeth and Clarke, a subscription service to relieve the headache of the rote shopping experience
I think braces and semicolons are romantic, and being alive during the adolescence of the internet is a magical thing.
Teaching a Man to Fish With a Computer
Last week I had the privilege of traveling to the Dominican Republic with the organization Handfulsof Hope. We went down to bring food, clothing, and care to some of the poorest villages about anhour outside of Santo Domingo. We also built a roof, and did a lot of painting (photo above is meafter a full day's work painting).children were at the village. We think that all our stuff provides us with happiness, but in reality itprovides us with stress and obligation. After months planted behind my machine it was lovely tobe able to spend my days working outside. I even did construction and help put a roof on one ofthe buildings in the village.computer that a teacher was working with. There was a larger monitor they were all watching onand learning from. From what I could see, a specific program was being taught on a Windows box,it could have been anything, I didn't get to ask. I got to say "Hello," the experience was wonderfuland it was great to see that even in this place, where many people don't own much more thantheir clothes, and this is their Wikipedia:computer for the first time? What is the fastest way to get them from illiterate to a place wherethey can be making money from the web like the rest of us?commerce means that you don't have to own a storefront on Park Ave to make serious cash, orideally, feed your family. There are many organizations that take homemade crafts from third worldareas and put them online, however, what about empowering the people to do this themselves?them. The first place I looked to send help to this class was One Laptop Per Child to see if Icould buy some laptops and send them, from their site it appears you can only donate laptops tothe areas they designate (that makes perfect sense for their organization, just doing someresearch). I could buy some netbooks and send them, but would need to come up with a strategyto make them provide value, especially with no clear way to get them online. As much fun asMS Word and Solitaire are, what could you show them that would turn them into tools that couldhelp feed a village?an offline version of their site (I bet for this very reason), so that's a great place to start. Givingthem the ability to teach themselves the higher maths and sciences is key. In this village, it'sextremely rare to have anything higher than a middle school education as going to HS costsmoney that they don't have. There is a lot that has to happen after that, and that's where I am lost.I hung out with there (taken with my iPad). I was able to communicate with them through thisoffline app from Lonely Planet (and broken HS spanish). They loved my iPad, we played a lot ofCheckers and other games. It was a real study in how technology brings the world together.go back next year to teach and by then I'd like to have a helpful strategy, I'm going to continuedoing research on my end, but if anyone has seen anything like this out there it would be greatlyappreciated.Posted at 10:23 PM in Intar Social Commentary | Permalink
Reblog (0) | | |