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- .IF DSK1.C3
- ^^^^^^TEXTWARE, SOFTWARE, and ELSEWHERE
-
- OR What's Going on in 99-Land!
-
-
- ^^^^^^^^^T.I. Articles by Jack Sughrue
-
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^LOGO LUNACY
-
-
- "So far in your three years of computer reviewing you have managed to
- ignore the most important language in existence," so chastised a teacher
- friend of mine recently. I knew what was coming, but I asked her to
- explain anyway. (I'm one of these people who thrive on maschistic guilt
- trips.)
- "Logo," she explained.
- "Yes?"
- "Logo, you idiot! You never write anything about Logo in any of your
- reviews."
- "I try not to."
- "I was right. You are an idiot."
- "As you say."
- "Do you mean to say you are NEVER going to write about Logo?"
- I saw the time had come. "Not if I can help it."
- "What!"
- Just exactly what was said by her after that is not suited for a
- family publication such as this. In a watered-down version she accused
- me of being against God, country, Mom, and apple pie. I was definitely a
- Communist and probably a child molester to boot.
-
- Actually, hers was a conservative reaction. In some teaching circles
- I would probably not be alive to contrive these sentences.
- Logo has become a cult. A Cult. A CULT! Logo is thought of by many
- educators and parents as THE ONLY CORRECT WAY. Like many religious
- freaks who feel their religions are THE ONLY CORRECT WAY down the path of
- righteousness, the Logo Loonies (as they are known by computer educators
- whose approach is more flexible) have no room in their hearts for
- teachers who wish to use the classroom computers for Computer Assisted
- Instruction (CAI), programming, games, adventures, word processing, data
- bases, testing, flashcards, spreadsheets, whatever (unless it is devised
- through Logo).
- Don't get me wrong: I like Logo. I use it in my classroom. I play
- with it at home. I believe it to be a profound language. I even work in
- an excellent school system that has Logo only in the elementary
- curriculum.
- There is a boat missed here by the Logo Loonies, though. They miss
- the boat because have chosen to be blind to all except Logo. They choose
- to be (and, worse, make others be) computer illiterates through
- training.
-
- Now that that has been said, I will finally get around to Logo for
- the T.I. There are two, Logo II being more profound with many more
- features. But either Logo I or II is better in many ways that most of
- the other Logos on the market. (For one thing, the T.I. version has tile
- graphics which none of the others have.)
-
- Rather than describe Logo in detail, however, I would much prefer to
- discuss two books about Logo which I think are good. (There are at least
- a half-dozen really good Logo books out which are suited for the T.I.
- I'm selecting these two because the kids in my fifth-grade class prefer
- these two over all the others.)
-
- K-POWER which was not around too long before being sucked up by its
- parent magazine (the inane FAMILY COMPUTING), put out a few solo items.
- One of them was a book called LOGO FUN ($5.95, Scholastic).
- This is a perfect starter (beyond the manual and accompanying
- programs). It's simple and direct and has specifics for all the Logos on
- the market. This is a good chance to make comparisons.
- As LOGO FUN goes through the writing and editing features of Logo, it
- establishes through example some excellent skills to build upon. The
- student who step-by-steps it can hope to come out of the book a pretty
- good beginning programmer in an exciting language. Logo's strength, of
- course, is the way it teaches logic. This book really builds on that
- strength. The examples are very dramatic and really appeal to the
- youngsters. So whether you are using this cartridge at home or in school
- or for the child side of your adult self, this is the probable best
- starter.
-
- Once you have completed beginninghood and are ready for the Big Time
- run right down to your local T.I. store and buy A LITTLE BIT OF LOGO
- MAGIC by Donna Bearden ($13.95 hardbound). As I don't have a T.I. store
- in my neighborhood I sent to PERMA-BOUND, Vandalia Road, Jacksonville,
- Illinois 62650 for my copy. I believe it is in paperback form (also
- 8X11) from the Reston Publishing Company, Reston, VA, at a much cheaper
- price, but my copy was to be used in a classroom and needed the hard
- binding.
- This book is subtitled ADVENTURES FOR INTERMEDIATE PROGRAMMERS. Very
- apt. It is teriffic. Brad Foster's wizard and dragon illustrations
- delightfully enhance the text on every page. It is a gem of a book that
- uses Logo in far better ways than most people use it: elaborate designs
- with simple shapes; patterns, tessellations & optical illusions; spider
- webs and other magnificent designs; questions, quizzes & quotations;
- fractured fables and customized cliches; and, finally, an adventure in
- the Dark Forest. Those are the almost-self-explanatory chapter headings.
-
- A BIT OF LOGO MAGIC assumes you know something about Logo, so it
- doesn't go into the tiny little specifics of LOGO FUN, but it does give
- you some excellent and very dramatic programs, which, like so many of the
- good Logo programs, are extremely small for what you get.
- If you do any programming at all but have yet to try Logo be prepared
- for a few sleepless nights. Logo IS addictive. And you will be
- astounded at how little is needed to create very large things. To
- perform some of the Logo graphics tasks in BASIC, for example, would be
- so long and boring your toes would drop off. And excecuting the program
- would be so S L O W !!! Logo takes minutes to program many things
- and seconds to execute. Logo is better than almost any programming
- language at repeat tasks.
-
- So now that you can buy Logo II at much reduced prices (and Logo I at
- extremely reduced prices on the used market), I would highly recommend
- getting it. It's fun! It's for adults, too! And with these two books
- your Logo World will be wide open to you.
-
- (Caution: though you may learn to love Logo [I did.] you must beware
- of the Logo Loonies. Don't fall victim to their sales pitch. There are
- other worlds for computer kids to grow into.)
-
- I'm glad I finally wrote this review. Maybe the pressure will be off
- now, and I can go back to my classroom computers in peace (and I'll have
- to look into the Reston/Prentice Hall catalogs to see what other T.I.
- goodies they might have hidden in their warehouses).
-
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459, E.Douglas, MA 01516]
- ***********
-
- If any newsletter editor prints these articles, please put me on your
- mailing list. Thanks - JS
-
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