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On Jan 25, 9:23 pm, wrote:
I have a situation, and would like some opinions rather than flames on how to handle it. My wife teaches at a public school just off the Easter Arizona Navajo reservation. Lately, a junior school science teacher is starting up a science club and has asked me to provide for the amateur radio side of the club and be its control operator. She believes that the kids would be fascinated by the Morse code - Dxing - Construction end of the hobby, even though Morse is no longer a required test element. The kids are mostly Navajo and thusly have a very limited technological background (hence the reason for the club to stir the interest), so I need something concrete with immediate payoff to keep their interest hooked while getting them as ready as I can to write their Technician exam. The nearest VEC is 4 hours away and I'd rather have as few fail as possible. I had thought to start an unlicensed micro-power code practice net whose range would be limited to about a 30 mile radius, which is about the size of the local reservation right next to the school. What I want to do is provide each kid with a popcorn CW transceiver for the colorburst frequency (3579 khz), a key, a short random wire, and a battery. That way they could practice amongst themselves with myself as occasional net control. Ignoring your legal question, a suggestion: Radio isn't too impressive among kids these days. Especially in lesser-developed parts of the world (I honestly don't know how much that overlaps with these kids?) everybody has a cellphone anyways. So if Morse code is to be an attractor (and it is, being an arcane art with secret-code aspects, going to be somewhat attractive to at least some kids), start with wired operation. Yeah, it's really super-basic: battery, key, beeper, wires, maybe a blinking light bulb. But if you skip the basics (and it sounds like these kids may have already missed the basics) then they'll get nothing out of it anyway. I've worked with similar school-age kids in a vastly more developed/educated part of the U.S. and they generally don't know how to wire a light bulb to a battery even though they all know how to use a USB keychain to exchange MP3's via myspace accounts. If you're lucky, you'll find a one or two techie kids who take after the detailed radio interests not too different than your own. Otherwise, aim low, very very low in terms of complexity, in an effort to bring up the low end rather than cater to the one or two kids who would really benefit from your more advanced plans. Tim. |