Reading Rainbow Kickstarter Heads Into Home Stretch 68
An anonymous reader writes "A month ago, LeVar Burton and his friends at Reading Rainbow created a Kickstarter campaign designed to bring their app for the iPad and Kindle Fire to the Web at large. They asked for a million dollars, and quickly blew the doors off their goal, receiving over three million dollars in three days. There are 48 hours remaining in the fundraiser, which has garnered over 4.5 million dollars, and with over 92,000 contributors, is the most heavily backed Kickstarter campaign of all time. To sweeten the pot, Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane has offered to match any pledges over the $4 million mark, up to an additional million dollars."
Seth MacFarlane (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't necessarily like everything he has done in his career, but he has certainly been putting a lot of money into solid causes lately. The Cosmos series was pretty good and now this. Respect.
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He makes his money telling dick jokes (n.b. I enjoy dick jokes), but he does seem to be doing the right things with said dick joke money.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]
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"I enjoy dick" - mythosaz, 2014.06.30
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True.
This isn't going to do much (Score:5, Insightful)
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There is no shortage of upper and middle class kids that while technically able to read rarely chose to do so. I agree the PBS approach made more sense, and I would really prefer if there was a no/low cost option available. But we shouldn't damn an idea that can still do good, just because their may be other better ways to do good.
Re:This isn't going to do much (Score:4, Informative)
I thought one of the things they were hoping to do with the extended stretch goals is give subscriptions to poorer communities (libraries in rural or inner-city settings, etc) so that it could be utilized by the people who couldn't normally afford it.
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If they figure they can finance this with $1mil, and it looks like they'll probably get around $6mil funding in total, that's $5mil they can put into "free" subscriptions. Not bad. If they set up a donation channel as well, and make the "non-free" subscriptions some sort of matching deal (for each paid subscriber, another free subscription is made available), this could actually work reasonably well.
Plus, if they can make this a web app that'll run on a phone screen, they'll reach a LARGE number of poor p
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>
I have absolutely no problem at all with poor people having smartphones, although I do cringe a bit when they have something like a new iPhone or other flagship phone
Why? Is it because you don't think they've "earned" the right to own a fancy phone, because they're poor?
Perhaps they saved for it for a long time. Perhaps it's their only link to the online world and their only source of entertainment (Youtube etc.). Perhaps it makes more sense to buy an expensive phone and keep it for years and years, than it is to buy a new low-end phone ever 6-12 months.
Please don't judge people for their actions, when you have no idea what led to them.
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Don't be too hard on him -- he was responding to my point: "poverty often has to do with bad choices as much as lack of access to resources, and in many places now, people below the poverty line have Android phones capable of running this sort of thing."
iPhones really are a poor choice for people with limited income, as they tend to be associated with the more expensive contracts. However, there are lots of exceptions.
In this case, it would have been useful to judge the parent poster taking into considerat
Library hours (Score:3)
give subscriptions to poorer communities (libraries in rural or inner-city settings, etc)
Getting children to commute to these libraries might be a challenge. A lot of public libraries close for the night around the time the parents get home from work, and then they close for the weekend.
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in my community, my local public library was situated a quarter of a mile from my middle school. Served as day-care, spent so many hours there, playing reading and generally being underfoot for the poor librarians. I think i also learned to love reading there too. since there was not much else to do. :)
thank you public libraries and tolerant librarians.
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I could be naive but I'd imagine the more successful the RR app gets, the more they will do to distribute it to people who can't afford it.
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Stop complaining. You, and the idiots that modded up need to go read what they are doing, what the goal is and come back an apologize for being knee jerk stupid.
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Stop complaining. You, and the idiots that modded up need to go read what they are doing, what the goal is and come back an apologize for being knee jerk stupid.
From the kickstarter page it looks like they're going to put it on the web, and put it in classrooms. Unless I misread that, or the kickstarter page fails to adequately explain the goals, they're explicitly not going to be reaching the kids who need them the most with this plan.
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The problem with (new) Reading Rainbow is that it will end up targeting and catering to kids that are already interested and proficient in reading, due to those kids being in families able to buy into the subscription. Twenty years ago, it worked because even poor families generally had at least a single crappy TV with rabbit ears, which was enough to get PBS. That 4 or 5 million that ends up getting raised would go a lot further by addressing actual core issues with poverty, rather than giving kids who already know and like to read even more reason to do so.
That makes an enormous leap of logic, that children who have any sort of basic literacy no longer need any help or encouragement. A four year old that can read isn't automatically going to become a twelve year old that can read better and is still interested in reading anything other than text messages. I would argue that in today's world its even more important to encourage reading because unlike the days when television was the great distraction today there are far more sources of distraction competing
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"It is better to light a candle than curse the darkness."
Just a thought for you.
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Twenty years ago, it worked because even poor families generally had at least a single crappy TV with rabbit ears, which was enough to get PBS.
Did it actually work? Genuinely curious because I can't find any studies on the topic
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http://www.jstor.org/stable/41... [jstor.org]
http://jlr.sagepub.com/content... [sagepub.com]
http://works.bepress.com/leah_... [bepress.com]
http://www.npr.org/2009/08/28/... [npr.org]
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03... [nytimes.com]
http://www.literacytrust.org.u... [literacytrust.org.uk]:
Educational programming has also aimed to elevate knowledge of texts and literacy as in the programmes Barney and Friends (Guofang, 1999) and Reading Rainbow (Wood and Duke, 1997), which offer content on reading books and raising childrenâ(TM)s knowledge of books. This is important since researchers at the University of Sheffield have also suggested that pre-schoolers who develop an ability to talk about texts become familiar with literacy and have greater success with learning to read once they enter school (Hannon, 2000; Hannon, Weinberger and Nutbrown, 1991). "
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What LeVar Burton really thinks of reading rainbow (Score:2)
Reading Rainbow's New Theme Song with LeVar Burton: http://youtu.be/VQ34s3kKFDY [youtu.be]
The details for nerds part is missing (Score:1)
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Growing Potential (Score:2)
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I feel like we've barely grazed the surface of the potential of crowd funding. I mean, in a real sense here we, as society, are funding self-education - we are funding the education of our own society. That's cool.
Government and taxes have been a way of society crowd funding its own education for far longer than kickstarter has been around. It says something about how youngsters perceive our extant system if kickstarter campaigns funding education seem like a new thing.
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If only there were a central organization that could collect all this money, with those who could afford it paying more, and then re-distribute it ....... oh wait!!!!
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The Reading Rainbow Kickstarter campaign isn't going to send men with automatic weapons to break down my door and haul me to prison if I decline to provide it funding. The entity you describe will.
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What it can do is provide an interface between NGOs and common people. NGOs typically receive much of their funding from governments and rich or wealthy benefactors. Fundraising means getting those folks into a room and convincing them to cough up some cash. Crowdfunding allows a wider audience (literally everyone on the Internet) to see the intended actions of the NGO and then choose to contribute. Rather than getting $45,000 from 100 rich people, they can get $45 from 100,000 without the immense overhead
Creative Commons Children's Books? (Score:2)
Re:Turn on the tablet (Score:2)
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kids parse all the information that's provided to them and one experience does not corrupt the other.
Up to a certain age, children are incapable of discriminating between commercials and programming. One experience does corrupt the other.
Of course, that was what was so great about PBS. You saw a lot of begging, but no commercials.
I speak of it in the past tense only because it's television, which in its current form is losing influence.
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We don't have a TV, but we got a Wii U (it's driving a 4K monitor, there's a complicated story behind it). Legend of Zelda is the biggest incentive our six-year-old has had to improve his reading.
It was simple. (Score:2)
all he did was reroute Reading Rainbow funding source through the Kickstarter phase array.
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The summary mentions that funding is at $4.5 million and Seth will match $1 million above $4 million.
The project is at $4.66 million now with 41 hours left. Seth is going to be in for $1 million.
I like his shows, but he is showing some true character lately. Good guy all around.
Public Failure (Score:2)
25% of 4th graders can't read an comprehend a simple English sentence like the one presented in the kickstarter video.
It's a massive failure of the (public) school system, and the public school system can probably thank the politicians for this failure.
To get such grand scale illiteracy in a country takes something else than
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- Socrates, 469-399 B.C.
Don't worry too much. The children will grow up, and invent some shit that we have