Bill Clinton is not what you would call a "techie." In the college vernacular that divides everything into "techies" and "fuzzies," he falls on the softer side of the ledger.

The man belongs to the last generation of CEOs without a computer on his desktop. He doesn't know his e-mail address without asking Al Gore. He probably thinks a hard drive is giving Chelsea a lesson in parallel parking.But last weekend, he was out this way, doing some volunteer work in Palo Alto, Calif. He and Gore were running wire through a Bay area school as part of Netday96. This was the hugely ambitious effort that engaged more than 17,000 volunteers, 1,100 corporate sponsors and 1,900 organizers in getting some 2,600 California schools wired and ready for the Internet on the same day.

"What you are doing today," he told the Netdayers, "is America at its best and it is guaranteeing America's future." Indeed, in his January State of the Union Address the president set the goal of having every school online by the year 2000. It's become his own high-tech version of JFK's promise to get a man on the moon.

But I have a strong suspicion that the most important aftereffect of Netday isn't the hardwiring, but the human connection between those volunteers and the schools. The most important part of the national goal may not be linking to the Internet, but refocusing some national attention on public education.

Consider what's going on in California under the roof of the barn-raising. Some 5.3 million children are enrolled in public schools. In one study, half the state's teachers said they have trouble assigning homework because they don't have enough textbooks. In another, the majority of teachers in the large school districts were making less money than in 1987.

Half the schools are over 30 years old. Even the benefits of Netday were unevenly distributed, because many poorer and older schools haven't the wiring to get "wired up." How do you hold a barn-raising when the roof leaks?

Schools are suffering from a not-so-benign neglect that won't be cured by electronics. They get the most public notice when they are giving out condoms or taking away guns. There are more politicians worried about prayer in the classroom than about education. While Washington is talking about computers in the classroom, the Tennessee legislature is talking about letting school boards dismiss teachers who dare to present evolution as a scientific fact.

View Comments

These are the contradictions of living in the era of the World Wide Web. We are easily, instantaneously connected across time zones and cultures to a vast community of user groups and colleagues. But we are easily and gradually disconnected from our neighborhoods and the schoolchildren on the next block.

The companies that work in cyber-space, hiring electronic workers from anywhere, can forget where they are, what ground they share. Citizens who can go anywhere - sitting in front of a screen - are also less likely these days to get up and go to a town or PTA meeting. Virtual reality replaces what the "techies" now call "r.l.", real life. But technology can't surf by the problems of real-life schools. Or, in Clinton's words, guarantee America's future.

From all reports, the Netday companies and volunteers got more out of their day than learning how to run red, white and blue cable through ceilings and walls. They got the pleasure of hands-on helping. With luck, some of those folks will look around and see a wall that needs painting, a student that needs mentoring, a school that needs supporting.

In the end, when every school is wired in and powered up, education is still a "fuzzie." That's http://www.fuzzie.com.

Join the Conversation
Looking for comments?
Find comments in their new home! Click the buttons at the top or within the article to view them — or use the button below for quick access.