Comment on ISO 26300

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some_kind_of_guy@lemmy.world ⁨3⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

I graduated in 2011, and same. My high school had a pretty janky mix of mostly Dell Inspiron towers, and mostly Windows XP but with a handful of Windows 2000 and ME machines that for some reason (prolly hardware too old) escaped their upgrades. We went through impressively comprehensive MS Office training and even Computer Tech classes (essentially an intro to an intro to computer science where we learned data concepts and built a PC).

A few years later, 90% of those machines had been scrapped, the mandatory courses were all gone and the kids all had cheap crappy Chromebooks. Now any courses are electives and the students are expected to just magically know how to use the software they’re required to use. Consequently, any class involving use of a computer, even if it’s just word processing for English essays and such has the teacher having to show the students how to use the stuff. Otherwise there are problems. It’s a sorry state of affairs and a lot more kids are getting left behind when it comes to tech.

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