Middle Tech: Blurring the Division between High and Low Tech in Education (1998)
by
Mike Eisenberg
,
Ann (nishioka Eisenberg
| Venue: | The Design of Children's Technology |
| Citations: | 10 - 7 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Eisenberg98middletech:,
author = {Mike Eisenberg and Ann (nishioka Eisenberg},
title = {Middle Tech: Blurring the Division between High and Low Tech in Education},
booktitle = {The Design of Children's Technology},
year = {1998},
pages = {244273},
publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
In 1997 the most prestigious high school science fair in the United States—the Westinghouse Science Competition [Berger 94] —was won by Adam Cohen, then a senior at Hunter High School in New York City. Cohen's project, "Near-Field Photolithography", involved the construction of a home-built scanning tunneling microscope (or STM—a high-resolution







