In the 1950s consumer culture in
America boomed. This brought on the advent of televisions and radios. New forms
of communication that would continually get expanded upon to the point that
they are at today. Before the radio families would spend their evenings reading
books together and would go to bed earlier before electricity allowed them to
continuously have light. Although technology allows students to connect to
teachers and their works in new ways the negatives outweigh the positives in
school.
Technology negatively impacts
students life by removing imagination from work this effectively automates the
children into robots. It also makes students have short term attention spans. I
am currently at an Art festival where we were told to draw a Form line design
on a skateboard. As we began I realized that 90 percent of the students had,
without even trying to form an idea of their own like good little robots,
immediately whipped out their phones to gather information and designs off of
the internet.
Schools must regard the fact that
although technology is the “modern” way of learning a deficiency of valuable
skills is formed due to the ignorance and unproductivity, formed by
technological advancements. As a result, students have grown less cultured and less
intelligent. According to David Gelernter, “Our skill free children are
overwhelmed by information even without the internet.” (Source E) The rise of
technology has not improved the quality of schooling. Children have begun to
play more and more video games (which is very unproductive according to Dyson
in Source C), develop a lack of skills. Just because kids have the opportunity
to utilize technology does not mean that it is beneficial. Gelernter notes the irony in Clinton’s
argument that technology can give kids access to worldly information, unable to
be achieved without things like the internet. Kids are falling behind due to
technology, don’t let schools do the same.
Furthermore,
technological devices have been known to distract children, causing a lack of
imagination due in part because of the lack of nature around them. In Source C
Esther Dyson believes that the rite of
technology in school curriculums is not necessarily a good thing, but that it
is a significant “social problem”. He argues that in today’s children live in
an “environment that often seems to stifle a child’s imagination rather than
stimulate it” (Source C) The “over-feeding” of information causes children to
easily lose focus and causes shorter attention spans. If schools were to adapt and
bring new technologies in they would be fostering an unimaginative and robotic-like
mindset in their students.
In addition,
due to the increasing power of technology children are spending less time in
nature. The cartoon in Source F depicts situational irony by depicting a child
inside, watching the nature channel, instead of playing outside. Students
should learn from experience, not simply watching a screen.
Before
schools fall into the trap of electronics they must consider all of the
negative side effects of removing that experience and connection that student
shave when they actually have hands on work rather than stimulations. By taking
a 3D experience and converting it into a flat screen you remove all of the
valuable lessons that students learn by doing. Technology, although easy to
use, teaches students to not think for themselves. However, school is all about
teaching students to think for themselves.