Here is the first meeting type, done by creating a simple circle and asking the children many questions aimed at creating a connection between things they know about concrete life and these concepts, memory, Google, computer, internet, which have substantially flattened everything ... kind of a Russian salad. At one point we brought out an old computer which they were free to explore. They got excited, we put in on a table and the objects got taken apart and commented, always in the same questioning approach. Spontaneous groups appeared, aiming at investigating some aspects in depth. After about an hour, the children were invited to sit in a circle, which they speedily did, to my amazement because they were really enthusiastic about what they were doing and we suggested making a survey. They all volunteered to go to the blackboard. Fortunately, the teachers made the selection because I wouldn't have known how to do that. The survey was about their habits, video games the computer they use, tablets, etc. In the following clip, we see the second meeting type where the children are offered the four computer kits and the four video cameras. Children are divided into four groups of four and roles get assigned: one child makes video recordings, one writes the story, one draws and one works at building the computer and will command it afterwards. Then they move to building and the meaning of the various parts is explained to the children. The children build, write, document, and as you can see, this is a slow approach. We also suggest that they use the instruction booklet that they must try to follow. The booklet is written in English but the illustrations are very clear. This also allows us to discuss the meaning of some English words. They get help if they ask for it but always according to the principle of minimal intrusion, just showing them then letting them enact what is shown, actually do the work. Always, or almost always, they achieved the goal, and with great concentration, as can be seen with this little girl. Collaboration is great too: hands helping one another, not clashing, collaboration between different roles. I was deeply impressed by the diligence of these children. Nothing like the idea I got from public discourse on bad manners, restlessness, superficiality. I felt that if children are respected as persons and if they are offered things related to their own reality, they are also, to my mind, very, very disciplined. As to the myth that digital natives will not use instruction booklets, it depends: if they are put in a situation where the booklet helps, they use it as, for instance, towards the non-trivial action of attaching correctly the delicate jack of the audio loudspeaker to the computer's small card: a delicate operation. Roles were managed informally: for instance, if a child got tired of making video recordings and another -- like this little girl -- asked to take over, we let her do it. Once the computer was built, time was over, or almost over, so it was time for reading the texts. As it was late, I had offered to disassemble the computers myself. To my surprise, the children asked instead if they could disassemble them themselves. And they did it with impressive accuracy. I found some boxes -- they all put everything back but some but all parts back exactly as they had found them, with all wires coiled and each part at the right place. In the last part, the narrations were read the drawings were shown. The monitors only got connected during the following meeting. Computers got built more quickly because the children already were somewhat expert in that and then the monitors got connected, and thus they were able to start exploring them. They immediately found a game, Minecraft, with which they obviously started at once to play and in this case we let them play freely so that they could find a link with the world they know.