It started simply enough. I gave a talk in Missouri and went out for pizza with library school students afterwards and one of them came up to me and said “Hey you mentioned Mousercise in your talk… I know the guy who made that!” He put me in touch and I got to email a bit with Chris Rippel who now works for the Central Kansas Library System and talk a little bit about Mousercise (originally called Mouserobics until Disney found out) , what I think is one of the best sites on the internet. He agreed to answer a few questions for me.
1. Did you make your original Mouserobics/Mousercise as a thing for work? Is it something you used at your job at the library?
When I taught my first basic computer class in Prairie View, Kansas, I lectured on how a computer worked and how to use a mouse. Eyes glazed over. Soon after I made Mousercise.
2. Do you still work at the library?
I still work for the Central Kansas Library System. CKLS has member libraries, not patrons. I was teaching classes in member libraries, not at CKLS.
3. Did you make any other similar tutorials?
Sort of. Here is one about keyboarding. And I played with Word, etc., but none are as successful as Mousercise.
4. What are your go-to sites for people who are looking to teach people computer basics?
I have no one place. Over the years I have made a number of Web sites with links to online tutorials. My first and biggest was a delicious page called Computer Training Tutorials, or something like that. Now I use blogger Web sites to provide links to more training after specific classes, but they don’t get used. Here is one example. I intended to do a Web page for each software, but I didn’t.
I recently gave one of our computer people, Maribeth Turner, my list of Blogger Web sites and she has incorporated the links into a Web site she is creating.
5. What do you think the biggest challenges are in this day and age for teaching technology skills to novice users?
Patience
Lecturing too much to novices. Novices understand little of what you say and, therefore, remember less. So, for me, the main lesson of mousercise is more work, less talk, and be there to show students how to correct their mistakes. Teaching people how to correct mistakes is as important, sometimes more important, than teaching how to do something correctly. So, in my classes, I generally hand out exercises and tell them to type this. When needed, I give them one- to three-minute explanations of what to do, then let them do it. When that part is done, we go to the next part, i.e., short explanations followed by lots of work.
Covering too much in each class. We often pack in so many topics that novice students can’t remember and learn them. Covering less and giving students time to absorb a few basic things works better for me. This has an additional advantage for teaching librarians. Having to cover less allows librarians who may not be experts to also teach classes. Librarians knowing how to type a letter in Word know enough to teach a novice class on it even when they don’t know all the ins and outs of this program. When people ask about something you don’t know how to do. Then you have a topic for the next class.
6. Anything else you’d like to add?
I was going by myself with a mobile computer lab out
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I knew Chris when he made his mousercise tutorial, I used it at the Southeast Kansas Library System training librarians new to computers. As the director of the Central Kansas Library System I’d like to commend Chris for his dedication to training librarians in all facets of librarianship. He’s intense, quirky, and knows how to train adults.
I am the director of one of the libraries in the Central Kansas Library System, where Mousercise was born. I have been using it to teach basic computer classes to adults for something like 18 years, and it’s the best tool I’ve found. Students learn to use the mouse, but also develop useful skills they will need to navigate the Internet and other programs. Long live Mousercise!
Great work, Chris!