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Re: [CQ-Contest] Observations of a young ham

To: Charles Harpole <hs0zcw@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Observations of a young ham
From: W0MU Mike Fatchett <w0mu@w0mu.com>
Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2016 21:00:15 -0700
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Well said Charlie.

I think take many of the skills I have learned from radio for granted. My son looks at me and asks who taught you to do that? Much of it we learn hands on and failure, having good elmers and groups like this to learn from. Young folks don't get any hands on schooling. They don't build birdhouses in school or fix motors so this is all foreign to them.

Thanks!

W0MU


On 12/18/2016 7:06 PM, Charles Harpole wrote:
Smart kid u have Mike. I have given up advocating a younger appeal as a strategy to ARRL. The age to appeal to now days is 9. At age 9 a youth is interested in two things that ham radio provides in abundance.... -unique and individual: one call sign IN THE WORLD as an i.d., and chance for targeted successes along with unique chance to show individuality. Added is being treated as an adult among real adults.

-joins a secret group: with secret Morse and secret knowledge, the youth can be super special within a secret group.

Youth at age 9 now days wants two contradictory things that ham radio supplies 1. to be big, grown up, individual (with no bossing parents) and 2. to be part of a group, ideally secret, of full acceptance and full "fitting in" no questions asked.

Please aim at age 9 when the developing personality is ready for ham radio. However, prepare to lose most of them at about 15 when the Internet takes over. Ham radio represents virtually everything the modern teen and young adult NEEDS but abhors. Like: doing satisfyingly difficult things over a longer time span (which builds so many mental strengths like discipline, problem focus and solving, patience, and self-reward for a self-goal). Like: shifting from instant gratification of superficial things to gaining personal satisfaction from deep devotion to a truly worthwhile result. Like: gaining satisfaction for contributing to a group of live humans (field day, club events) face to face. Like: on-air ability to rag chew about real, interesting topics and to adapt to the other person.

Those are abilities that help provide a satisfying and long life. The many can say in a dead end job at age 25 "I played to the top level of 3 video games, but where is my satisfaction now?" The few at age 25 can say "I built a radio station that bounced signals off the Moon, made a computer program that analyzed failure rates in transistors, and have a life-long friend in Gambia that I speak personally to weekly..... and my management job uses ham radio skills (beyond electronics) in organizing activities.

Maybe video games make good warplane jet pilots, and good eye-hand coordination, but gee, what a vacuous endeavor for life preparation.

Contesting is NOT winning, it is the struggle that is valuable. One can helicopter to the top of the mountain, but climbing it is very satisfying!

73, Charly

On Mon, Dec 19, 2016 at 12:42 AM, W0MU Mike Fatchett <w0mu@w0mu.com <mailto:w0mu@w0mu.com>> wrote:

    I had the opportunity to talk to my son in more detail and ask him
    why contesting does not interest him.  Here is what we discussed.

    1.  Cost to get in the game and have a chance to win is
    prohibitive.  You need a great station, land, etc to really win or
    compete.  The playing field is so unbalanced that it becomes a
    show stopper.  For him he has no costs when at home.  I consider
    my station modest with a 70 ft tower and land to put up Inv L's
    and full sized 80m verticals and some receiving antennas.  I could
    do more but we have horses and they need to roam and are hell on
    things in the pasture.

    2. You have to invest a lot of time to get good.  If he can not
    have a really good station then why invest the time to get good if
    you are not going to be able to really compete.

    2. The tools we use to contest, logging software, packet look like
    old dos programs.  He called them ugly and boring.  He is used to
amazing graphics in games. I found this observation interesting. I feel that the tools we have are pretty good and give me what I
    want to see readily available.  I was not expecting this answer.

    3. He is far more interested in using packet where he can
    immediately chase things.  Packet essentially gives him a list of
    things to do or goals.  It is more visual so more interesting.  He
    thought that more automated systems would be interesting.  Young
    people and even us older folk expect things to happen much
    faster.  They are the generation of instant satisfaction and some
    of that even rubs off on us older folk.

    4.  Talking to someone over the airwaves is still pretty cool. You
    can instantly talk around the world if the right condx exist, but
    we can talk all over the world with our phones so it is not as
    amazing as it once was.

    5. CW is interesting but he was surprised that we don't have
    better code readers.  While he would like to learn the code time
    is once again the factor.  They have so many other outlets for
    entertainment that it is hard to find time for all of them.

    6.  Results take far too long to come out

    7.  He proposed that all participants use a scoreboard type
    system.  Many of us have said this was something we need to do but
    have instead met with amazing resistance and a ton of excuses why
    people refuse to use it.  A system where everyone can check it out
    and see what is going in in the contest.  We are back to visuals.

    6. Playing radio in the car driving is fun because there is not
    much else to do but drive.

    7. He has his general license but he does not have the technical
    skills or electronic knowledge to build a shack or decent
    station.  I am not a great teacher especially to my own kids so I
    take some of the blame for this but it is hard to teach people
    things when they don't want to devote much time to it.  I feel a
    reluctance to even try to do something without having the proper
    knowledge.  A far cry from when I was young and tried all sorts of
    silly antennas and projects that mostly failed miserably but boy
    did I learn from those mistakes.

    That pretty much summed up our hour long conversation and I am no
    closer to figuring out how to sell ham radio and contesting to
    them.  I hope some will find this information helpful and interesting.

    W0MU






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--
Charly, HS0ZCW

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