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t.assertion
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2022-08-26
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ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING FOR THE
COMPUTER AGE
POETIC LICENSE....
Karen Douglas is a poet. A quite
good one in fact-- the "Atlantic
Monthly" recently published one of her
poems. In addition to writing poetry,
she also has a novel in progress,
writes a column for a city newspaper,
and teaches writing at a state
university.
Karen naturally uses a word
processor to keep up with this
workload. In fact, her eyes lit up
when we talked about computing just
as much as they did when we talked
about John Fowles novels, the subject
of her master's thesis.
The computer has become an integral
part of Karen's professional life.
Since she was obviously quite happy
with her set up, I posed the question:
When did you become comfortable using
your system?
She smiled as she recalled the
turning point. Like most turning
points, it was born of a small
disaster-- an important disk failed to
back-up properly.
Her first impulse, which all
beginners should understand, was to
run to the computer store for help.
But this time, the Maine-bred author
decided to remain true to the New
England tradition of self reliance.
After some tinkering, she completed
her back-up. The actual problem that
she faced might have been trivial, but
the confidence that she gained from
this episode subtly enhanced her
productivity.
HURDLES....
Thinking back over the interview, I
realized that I had gained confidence
with computers in the same way-- from
disasters. In fact, there seemed to
be two hurdles that all computer
neophytes must negotiate before they
become effective computer users.
The first hurdle is the deep seated
fear that if we press the wrong key or
jiggle any of the wires, our program
will be destroyed, our computer will
fry, and we ourselves will fall into a
giant crack in the earth.
A programming instructor tells me
that the first thing she stresses to
her beginning students is that "The
only way you are going to blow up your
computer is with a stick of dynamite."
Even then, she says, it takes quite a
while before the students are
comfortable.
The second hurdle is the one Karen
cleared: being too afraid to fix a
problem on our own-- even if we have a
good idea of how to fix it.
THE WAGES OF FEAR....
That's the problem with fear. Fear
makes you passive. Especially fear
of computers. Fear causes us to buy a
neat software program only to be too
afraid to stick it in the drive when
we get home. And it's fear, pure and
simple, that causes all of those $1500
systems to gather dust in our homes.
Passivity wastes more than money.
It wastes opportunity. Computers at
their best give us the tools for
creation. Computer users like Karen
can make use of these tools, can use
their machines to build poetry that
reaches the soul.
Until the rest of us learn to cross
the two barriers, to be willing to
act, our computers will never be an
extension of our imagination and will.
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