I am trying to write this myself.  I have found nothing that explains GNU/Linux 
adequately to my students.  I teach Biology at a public high school on the 
island of Saipan, in the Northern Mariana Islands, a commonwealth of the United 
States.  Many of my students have never used computers before.  The highest 
level computer course at our school is computer literacy, which I think is an 
introduction to M$ Works (call that literacy?).  

I have a four machine GNU/Linux (Debian) net in my classroom, for student use.  
Many students have gotten to know the basics---which consists of how to start 
up Galeon or Netscape, even how to log on as "students".  (I set up one 
account, so far, for most students, and leave the machine logged on to that 
account.  Comments?)

This is a demonstration/proof of concept project.  This is a Biology class; I 
don't have the free reign to spend two weeks on computer basics.  I have the 
students read Sterling's Brief History of the Internet, give them a few 
pointers of web searching, show them galeon, and let them search.  Some 
students do quite well.  

But I CANNOT FIND any single good introduction to GNU/Linux that is geared to 
this leverl.  Here is a typical opening paragraph:

   Linux is a POSIX compliant, UNIX-like operating system, with a kernel    
written by a Finnish graduate student, and etc., etc., etc.  

Con someone point me to some documents that actually attempt to explain what 
the differences are, from Windoze and the Mac (the two computers with which 
students are obviously acquainted)? 

I am writing this from scratch.  I am sure someone else has already done a 
better job than I can do---given that unique combination of 
nerd/geek/hacker/teacher?

I'm not sure this list is the best place to take up the issue---but it's a good 
one.  

Alan Davis
Marianas High School
Saipan, NMI
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                                     1-670-322-6580
    Alan E. Davis,  PMB 30, Box 10006, Saipan, MP 96950-8906, CNMI

I have steadily endeavored to keep my mind free, so as to give up any
hypothesis, however much beloved -- and I cannot resist forming one 
on every subject -- as soon as facts are shown to be opposed to it.  
                                  -- Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

  
 

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