I found the counterpoint article very interesting! I agree with John David Son that most students are born with a "mouse in hand". Our society seems to continually be moving towards full digitalization! Awesome, right? Well, I do think that students learn to use computers much early, they probably aren't typing before walking. My girlfriend is very resistant to allowing her son access to a computer. While its not an immediate issue, since he is only 11 months old, it will be more poignant in a couple years. But I think its important to realize that some of the newer generation of parents might not embrace this new age of tech like everyone assumes.
ps- Little Harper is currently walking just fine and he's yet to master logging online
Ok, back on topic! I don't think that using technology in the classroom will decress a student's attention span. Marcovitz argues that it could hard to "imagine an audience today sitting for three hoursat a time listening to complex arguments about the issues of the day" let alone students. I would believe that students would be able to pay attention if the presentation was engaging and interactive. I think students will pay attention just fine and be very engaged if we use technology inside the class. I am always multitasking in class but still paying attention to whats going on.
I do have some questions though about this dilemma. Do we repsect the wishes of parents who might not embrace technology? A parent may try to limit a childs computer time but if all their homework and classwork is on a computer, how can they do this? What about unpluging from tech? Children sitting around using technology is not very physically demanding, so is there going to be a decline in PE? I think its important for a balanced move towards this shift, but the shift will definitely not cause students to have poor attention spans.
Technological Social Justice
16 years ago