Thursday, November 29, 2007

Embracing the Digital World


This week I attended the Digital Future Summit in Auckland. This was a gathering of over 500 leaders from telecommunications, IT, education, youth, iwi, and government. One of the most interesting aspects for parents was a presentation by Barry Vercoe, professor of Music and Media Arts And Sciences at Media Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA.

Barry grew up in Paeroa before embarking on a very successful career in the USA. Together with Professor Nicholas Necroponte he helped form the internationally respected One laptop per child programme led by MIT. In brief the programme enables access to the Internet so that creativity and innovation are encouraged rather than stifled. He discussed ways in which laptops costing no more than $100 were made available to schoolchildren in the Solomon Islands. An e-learning community is then built by networking the laptops together.

We saw the responses and enthusiasm for learning as kids got to have their own laptop and to explore the Internet for themselves. In today's world we all need to be familiar with digital technology if we are going to have a say and have a role to play. We need to ensure that there are no pockets of New Zealand where children are left on the wrong side of the digital divide through lack of income or because they happen to live in the wrong part of the country.

Parents can draw real support from access to broadband and good information about parenting resources. Parents also need to be aware of the some of the risks associated with the Internet. Hectors World and other work by groups like Netsafe are all part of the pack of resources with which parents need to be empowered if we are to equip our children with the tools necessary to prosper in the 21st century while at the same time minimising risks from harmful elements in the Internet world. For more details on the summit itself refer to http://www.digitalsummit.org.nz/.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Parenting Counts

[This blog was first published as a letter to the editor of the Dominion Post newspaper 17 November 2007]


James Weir (DomPost November 10th) assumes that any parent given the choice would opt for squeezing more paid working hours into an already busy schedule.

Fortunately not all parents focus purely on the monetary costs of having children. If the so-called “vanishing women” (and a few Dad’s) have opted to invest more time with their kids then that is a legitimate choice. Part time work can fit well with school pick ups and drop-offs.

Economists and policymakers need to realise that many parents see time invested with children as important. Some parents make a legitimate and positive choice to stay at home while their children are young – despite the economic and social costs of doing so in today’s politically correct culture. Others choose to return to work earlier. It’s time to stop the judgmental social engineering which sees parents as economic units of production to be extracted from the home and coaxed out into the labour market. Caring for children is a productive investment.