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#12
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ospam (Larry Roll K3LT) wrote in message ...
In article , (William) writes: Billy: Not hardly. Young Miss Clauson bears the unfortunate burden of being a New Age, Dumbed-Down "Nickle" Extra. Larry, you're so quick to tear down the achievements of a child. Billy: Point taken, and I offer all appropriate apologies to Miss Clauson. However, her achievement, while a fairly notable one ***for a child,*** is no longer noteworthy for anyone over the age of, say, 10 years, and certainly a meaningless one for an adult. Larrah, at what age did you pass the Extra exam elements? |
#13
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(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
ospam (Larry Roll K3LT) wrote in message ... achievement only points accusingly to the fact that present amateur radio licensing requirements are "dumbed-down" to such an unreasonably low level that even a 7-year old can attain an Amateur Extra-class license. That's one way to look at it. The way I prefer to look at it is that a bright and motivated young child set herself a goal and achieved it. I don't see much of a connect between your particular preferences and the highly-probable reality in these cases. Parents and other relatives impose expectations on kids all the time. I sure did. I "motivated" mine any number of times into "achieving" and in some of those cases they met my expectations just to get me off their backs. And while the novelty of a 7-year old Extra is certainly "news" in the Amateur Radio community, it does not point to a secure future for our hobby/service. Why not? I don't see anything wrong with young people, or females, getting licenses. In fact, I think that sort of thing is just what ham radio needs *more* of! That's not what Larry meant. Over the 100 year history of ham radio maybe we've had what, pick a number, twenty kids under ten licensed? Versus around 1.5 million total U.S. hams? Those kids have all been statistical anomalies pure and simple and have not had, nor will they have any influence at all on the course of the service in the future. Any of Mattie's young peers, without the support of a licensed parent, and the material support of a functional station in their home, would not likely achieve the same results. Absolutely. How many of these kids *didn't* have a ham in the immediate family? So what? Part of what healthy families *DO* is support each other's needs and interests. In that family, it's clear that ham radio is a family thing, not something one family member does in seclusion from the rest. That's a good thing. It brings families together, crosses generational barriers, helps build a level of education, maturity and understanding that are greatly needed. I think you're over-preaching to the choir again here James. And there is no better way to help a child learn than to get them interested in the subject. Geography? Time zones? Math, science, technology? An interest in ham radio helps with all of those. Her folks shepherded her into ham radio beacause ham radio is a great way for kids to learn geography?? (About the best we can hope for is that other ham parents will take similar steps to induce their children to become licensed, but that's about as far as it can go until they become adults, with their own financial resources and the adult prerogatives that go with it. I never got any help in the ham radio area from my folks. So I was delayed a few years in getting started. Nothing unusual about that. A huge percentage of all of us kid hams didn't have any particular "parental support" when we became hams. All my folks cared about was that whatever it was that I was doing with a soldering iron in the cellar didn't result in the Henny Carr the town cop dragging me home by the scruff of my neck *again* for commiting some bush-league juvenile atrocity or another. Worked for them and it worked for me. About the best face I can put on this is that young Mattie now has the rest of her life to "grow" into the hobby. Hopefully, over the years, she will acquire technical knowledge and operating skills which will become equivalent to her Amateur Extra status. She got 4 wrong on Element 4. How many did you get wrong on yours? No-counter: We all know that there is *no* relationship between passing the tests and the level of useful knowledge reqired to put together an HF ham station. This NG has glaring examples of same. As of now, however, she is more of a stunt than the real thing. How do you know? He doesn't and neither do you. Fact is that it's not hard to find instances of their folks pressuring kids into outstanding accomplishments in order to have bragging rights about the kid. Which I suspect is where Larry is coming from. Whether it's true in Mattie's case is 100% conjecture. I have no doubt that when asked to engage in even a fairly low-level discussion of technical and operating subjects, she will not be able to give any reasonable accounting of herself, beyond perhaps the simple recitation of answers to the exam questions. You might be surprised. She's probably somewhere between the opposite poles you two guys live in. Tell ya what, Larry, I'll fill a box with parts and you can come over and build afunctioning ham rig out of them. No instructions, no elmers, just parts and a book or two. I did it when I was 13. I doubt you could do it, Larry. Virtually all yer kid ham predecessors could cobble rigs together "Back in my day". It was almost the norm then. A lot higher percentage of us designed and rolled our own than was the case "in your day" a decade and a half later. By the time Larry got into ham radio hombrewing no longer made any sense except in oddball cases so I doubt he had any reason to even consider building his own rig. Entry level rigs have been products of the era in which we came into the service. YMMV and it obviously has. Again, none of Mattie's inadequacies are her fault, she is just the product of her parent's dreams. Nonsense, Larry. She's an individual. Kids are not robots. C'mon, you know better than that. Seven year olds are about as compliant as they come. They're "individuals" only to the extent that their parents and teachers allow them to act independently. There are folks who walk into a test session with no ham license and walk out with an Extra. That was going on before the VE system, too. The barely-10-year-old I mentioned above had to do 13 wpm sending and receiving plus the old Class B/General written. I know Janie. Her father was Jesse Bieberman W3KT who is still a legend. Honer Roll top-ender for decades, phone and cw dx contester, 25wpm with a straight key for 48 straight. Vice Director of the Atlantic Division for decades and one of the most powerful voices in Newington in those days. Ran the W3 buro single-handed also for decades. Was also a private-school high school math instructor. You think maybe Jane just got up one morning when she was ten and outta nowhere declared that she was gonna pursue a ham ticket?? 73 de Jim, N2EY w3rv |
#14
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In article ,
(William) writes: (Larry Roll K3LT) wrote in message ... In article , (William) writes: Billy: Not hardly. Young Miss Clauson bears the unfortunate burden of being a New Age, Dumbed-Down "Nickle" Extra. Larry, you're so quick to tear down the achievements of a child. Billy: Point taken, and I offer all appropriate apologies to Miss Clauson. However, her achievement, while a fairly notable one ***for a child,*** is no longer noteworthy for anyone over the age of, say, 10 years, and certainly a meaningless one for an adult. Larrah, at what age did you pass the Extra exam elements? Mental or physical age? :-) LHA / WMD |
#15
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Brian Kelly wrote:
(N2EY) wrote in message . com... I think you're over-preaching to the choir again here James. And there is no better way to help a child learn than to get them interested in the subject. Geography? Time zones? Math, science, technology? An interest in ham radio helps with all of those. Her folks shepherded her into ham radio beacause ham radio is a great way for kids to learn geography?? Not necessarily, Brian, but studying for an amateur ticket gets kids fired up about learning. I can certainly see Jim's point about kids becoming interested in geography, the sciences and math. It didn't work toward interesting me in geometry though. I was caught reading QST hidden within my open geometry book. I never got any help in the ham radio area from my folks. So I was delayed a few years in getting started. Nothing unusual about that. A huge percentage of all of us kid hams didn't have any particular "parental support" when we became hams. All my folks cared about was that whatever it was that I was doing with a soldering iron in the cellar didn't result in the Henny Carr the town cop dragging me home by the scruff of my neck *again* for commiting some bush-league juvenile atrocity or another. Worked for them and it worked for me. For the first few weeks of my interest, my dad actively discouraged me with talk of amateur radio being a passing fad for me. He had visions of mounds of equipment gathering dust in a closet. My mother encouraged me and was able to convince my father that some of the meager family income should be spent on a transmitter for me if I earned the money for the receiver from my paper route. My dad had and has no technical abilities whatever. My mother was deathly afraid of electricity and wouldn't even clean my ham shack. She just knew that lightning was going to enter the house via my antennas. Both parents saw value in amateur radio as a wholesome activity, one which would nurture an interest in science and possibly lead to a career in electronics. I know Janie. Her father was Jesse Bieberman W3KT who is still a legend. Honer Roll top-ender for decades, phone and cw dx contester, 25wpm with a straight key for 48 straight. Vice Director of the Atlantic Division for decades and one of the most powerful voices in Newington in those days. Ran the W3 buro single-handed also for decades. ....and ran the W3KT outgoing QSL forwarding service for a number of years. Dave K8MN |
#16
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Len Over 21 wrote:
In article , (William) writes: Larrah, at what age did you pass the Extra exam elements? Mental or physical age? :-) At which age did you pass an amateur radio license exam, Leonard? Please continue your civil debate on morse code elimination. Dave K8MN |
#17
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Thanks for the info, Jim. Yes, I suspect the youngest would be girls since
males tend to mature at a later age. Check the posts in the newsgroup for proof of that ![]() 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA "N2EY" wrote in message ... Interesting story and obviously a very bright kid! Homeschooled, too. The story documents other young hams, including the Philly area's W3OVV, who earned her Class B at the Philly FCC office soon after her 10th birthday - in 1948. This was back in the days when *all* US ham licenses required 13 wpm code, sending and receiving, and when the writtens were not only "secret" but also consisted in large part of essay and draw-a-diagram questions. One interesting side note is that these young hams are almost all girls! 73 de Jim, N2EY "Age requirements? We doan' need no steenkeen age requirements!" --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.577 / Virus Database: 366 - Release Date: 2/3/04 |
#18
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In article ,
(Brian Kelly) writes: (N2EY) wrote in message .com... ospam (Larry Roll K3LT) wrote in message ... achievement only points accusingly to the fact that present amateur radio licensing requirements are "dumbed-down" to such an unreasonably low level that even a 7-year old can attain an Amateur Extra-class license. That's one way to look at it. The way I prefer to look at it is that a bright and motivated young child set herself a goal and achieved it. I don't see much of a connect between your particular preferences and the highly-probable reality in these cases. I just gave the opposite spin to Larry's. Parents and other relatives impose expectations on kids all the time. That's part of the job. I sure did. I "motivated" mine any number of times into "achieving" and in some of those cases they met my expectations just to get me off their backs. That's a bit different from Larry's claim that the only reason was because the mother pushed her. And while the novelty of a 7-year old Extra is certainly "news" in the Amateur Radio community, it does not point to a secure future for our hobby/service. Why not? I don't see anything wrong with young people, or females, getting licenses. In fact, I think that sort of thing is just what ham radio needs *more* of! That's not what Larry meant. Sure sounded like it to me. Over the 100 year history of ham radio maybe we've had what, pick a number, twenty kids under ten licensed? I dunno. Maybe a couple hundred. Look up a book called "Radio Rescue" by Lynne Barasch. Ten year old ham in 1923. True story. Versus around 1.5 million total U.S. hams? Where'd you get a number that big? Prolly more like a million. Those kids have all been statistical anomalies pure and simple and have not had, nor will they have any influence at all on the course of the service in the future. Not my point at all. Point is that two of things working against ham radio today are lack of youngsters and the tendency of some people to avoid hobbies the whole family can't enjoy. Family of hams beats both those trends. Any of Mattie's young peers, without the support of a licensed parent, and the material support of a functional station in their home, would not likely achieve the same results. Absolutely. How many of these kids *didn't* have a ham in the immediate family? Few if any. So what? The music teacher's kid is probably going to have more access to instruments than the plumber's. So what? Part of what healthy families *DO* is support each other's needs and interests. In that family, it's clear that ham radio is a family thing, not something one family member does in seclusion from the rest. That's a good thing. It brings families together, crosses generational barriers, helps build a level of education, maturity and understanding that are greatly needed. I think you're over-preaching to the choir again here James. I don't. And there is no better way to help a child learn than to get them interested in the subject. Geography? Time zones? Math, science, technology? An interest in ham radio helps with all of those. Her folks shepherded her into ham radio beacause ham radio is a great way for kids to learn geography?? Heck no - that's just a side benefit. (About the best we can hope for is that other ham parents will take similar steps to induce their children to become licensed, but that's about as far as it can go until they become adults, with their own financial resources and the adult prerogatives that go with it. I never got any help in the ham radio area from my folks. So I was delayed a few years in getting started. Nothing unusual about that. 'zactly. Which is why it took me a little longer. If I'd had real support, I'd a been really dangerous. bwaahaahaaa A huge percentage of all of us kid hams didn't have any particular "parental support" when we became hams. All my folks cared about was that whatever it was that I was doing with a soldering iron in the cellar didn't result in the Henny Carr the town cop dragging me home by the scruff of my neck *again* for commiting some bush-league juvenile atrocity or another. Worked for them and it worked for me. 'zactly. One of the biggest parental jobs is to get 'em interested in something - anything - that's relatively harmless compared to what's out there. Which they may get involved in anyway, but it beats taking the hands off approach. With some kids, a lot of support is needed. With others, the best way to kill the kid's interest is to get involved too much. About the best face I can put on this is that young Mattie now has the rest of her life to "grow" into the hobby. Hopefully, over the years, she will acquire technical knowledge and operating skills which will become equivalent to her Amateur Extra status. She got 4 wrong on Element 4. How many did you get wrong on yours? No-counter: We all know that there is *no* relationship between passing the tests and the level of useful knowledge reqired to put together an HF ham station. Of course. Point is she didn't just pass. Then again, she got 4 more wrong than our buddy in Allentown.... This NG has glaring examples of same. Oh yes - including one or two who couldn't even get any ham license, despite years-old predictions... As of now, however, she is more of a stunt than the real thing. How do you know? He doesn't and neither do you. And that's the point. Larry made all kinds of statements about someone he doesn't know at all. Fact is that it's not hard to find instances of their folks pressuring kids into outstanding accomplishments in order to have bragging rights about the kid. Which I suspect is where Larry is coming from. Whether it's true in Mattie's case is 100% conjecture. Bingo. I have no doubt that when asked to engage in even a fairly low-level discussion of technical and operating subjects, she will not be able to give any reasonable accounting of herself, beyond perhaps the simple recitation of answers to the exam questions. You might be surprised. She's probably somewhere between the opposite poles you two guys live in. And that's the point. Tell ya what, Larry, I'll fill a box with parts and you can come over and build afunctioning ham rig out of them. No instructions, no elmers, just parts and a book or two. I did it when I was 13. I doubt you could do it, Larry. Virtually all yer kid ham predecessors could cobble rigs together "Back in my day". I could, too. Many of my counterparts could. A few couldn't. It was almost the norm then. A lot higher percentage of us designed and rolled our own than was the case "in your day" a decade and a half later. By the time Larry got into ham radio hombrewing no longer made any sense except in oddball cases so I doubt he had any reason to even consider building his own rig. Coax can be had with the connectors already on, too. And premade G5RVs often make more sense than rolling one's own... Entry level rigs have been products of the era in which we came into the service. YMMV and it obviously has. The irony is that the box of parts I'd give Larry would include many parts that were only recently given to me by an anonymous benefactor.... Again, none of Mattie's inadequacies are her fault, she is just the product of her parent's dreams. Nonsense, Larry. She's an individual. Kids are not robots. C'mon, you know better than that. Yes I do. Kids are harder to train than robots. Seven year olds are about as compliant as they come. HAW!! They're "individuals" only to the extent that their parents and teachers allow them to act independently. I know some you oughta meet... There are folks who walk into a test session with no ham license and walk out with an Extra. That was going on before the VE system, too. The barely-10-year-old I mentioned above had to do 13 wpm sending and receiving plus the old Class B/General written. I know Janie. Her father was Jesse Bieberman W3KT who is still a legend. Honer Roll top-ender for decades, phone and cw dx contester, 25wpm with a straight key for 48 straight. Vice Director of the Atlantic Division for decades and one of the most powerful voices in Newington in those days. Ran the W3 buro single-handed also for decades. Was also a private-school high school math instructor. I knew him too. See above about the music teacher's kid. Only in this case it's more like Ormandy's kid. You think maybe Jane just got up one morning when she was ten and outta nowhere declared that she was gonna pursue a ham ticket?? Naw, she was copying code when she was six. And still active with the same call. At least nobody has yet accused the VEs of "fraud" (with absolutely no evidence) as has happened here before. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#19
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In article , Dave Heil
writes: Len Over 21 wrote: In article , (William) writes: Larrah, at what age did you pass the Extra exam elements? Mental or physical age? :-) At which age did you pass an amateur radio license exam, Leonard? Never tried, snarly dave. I passed my First Phone exam on the first try in Chicago at an FCC field office in March 1956. Never looked back. Now Larrah, the self-professed paragon of determination and moral virtue, once bragged and carried on that his "summa cum laude" standings in post-service college would get him any top spot job in human resources after graduation. He now drives a bus. Quod Erat Demonstrandum. Please continue your civil debate on morse code elimination. As soon as you show the way, snarly dave. So far you haven't exhibited much civility in that regard. But, I am always optimistic and hope for the best... Keep the morse faith. Beep. LHA / WMD |
#20
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![]() And there is no better way to help a child learn than to get them interested in the subject. Geography? Time zones? Math, science, technology? An interest in ham radio helps with all of those. They'd need HF privs for some of that. HF propagation is needed to get your signal to Pottsylvania... Her folks shepherded her into ham radio beacause ham radio is a great way for kids to learn geography?? I don't know what they do in K-12 grades now, but way back when I was a kid, geography was taught in grades 4 thru 7. "What's the capital of South Dakota?" "Where is Red China?" "What voltage do they apply to the electrified barbed wire surrounding the Communist Bloc?" ;-) We learned about evil Godless communism in geography class.... Nothing unusual about that. A huge percentage of all of us kid hams didn't have any particular "parental support" when we became hams. All my folks cared about was that whatever it was that I was doing with a soldering iron in the cellar didn't result in the Henny Carr the town cop dragging me home by the scruff of my neck *again* for commiting some bush-league juvenile atrocity or another. Worked for them and it worked for me. They didn't get paranoid about your messing with dangerous electricity? :-) My parents knew about electricity and had no real fear of it, but my grandmother had no clue at all about electricity. She grew up somewhere near Scranton PA before they had electricity there.... She got 4 wrong on Element 4. How many did you get wrong on yours? 3. Well, 2 on 4A and 1 on 4B. Tell ya what, Larry, I'll fill a box with parts and you can come over and build afunctioning ham rig out of them. No instructions, no elmers, just parts and a book or two. I did it when I was 13. I doubt you could do it, Larry. Virtually all yer kid ham predecessors could cobble rigs together "Back in my day". It was almost the norm then. A lot higher percentage of us designed and rolled our own than was the case "in your day" a decade and a half later. By the time Larry got into ham radio hombrewing no longer made any sense except in oddball cases so I doubt he had any reason to even consider building his own rig. Entry level rigs have been products of the era in which we came into the service. YMMV and it obviously has. Many novice setups were built out of junked tube TV parts and modified AM radio receivers. QST published many articles about such. The designs were such that you could have something that worked without causing a lot of TVI. Designs that were not fussy about adjustments and component selection. Which is what you want in manufacturing, something that can be thrown together and always work. |
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