This segment of an Alan Kay presentation (pt 2) really jumped out at me.
She’s never lived in a world that wasn’t densely populated with Macintoshes. …She literally learned to use it by sitting on her mother’s lap while her mother was working. So for this child, the Macintosh is not a piece of technology, but simply more material in the environment to manipulate.
Another interesting point to note is that even though she can’t read, she’s able to recognize standard textual menu items.
And in fact we discovered that she was about 70% literate — that about 70% of the generic window commands that are found in any Macintosh application, she’s able to use. Not just in a visual program like Mac Paint.
One message Alan Kay really drove home is not just that that computers can be simple enough for children, but that designing for children can lead to better designs for adults. But remember that that just because a child can use a computer does not make it a silver bullet for education.