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MediaWise® With Dr. Dave   Print this page

Technology Taking Over

A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to talk with more than 500 high school students in an assembly. As I delivered my presentation I noticed many of the students were using their cell phones to send text messages while I was up on stage. By the time I was done it seemed like half - and that's a conservative estimate - the members of my audience were staring at their phones instead of at me. It was tough to deliver the presentation with my usual enthusiasm.

After the morning sessions were over, I discussed what I'd observed with a few teachers. They told me that they have the same problem in their classrooms. And it's driving them nuts. Texting in class is distracting, insulting, and bewildering. And sending text messages doesn't just disrupt education for the student with phones. It sabotages the classroom for the other kids as well. Strangely, the students don't seem to understand what they're doing to themselves and others.

"Young people's technical expertise can often exceed their understanding," according to a new report from the Institute for Public Policy Research, a leading UK think tank. And that's a problem considering another of the report's findings,that kids are increasingly plugged in. In fact, they spend 20 hours a week on Facebook and other social networking sites alone, the report states. The report calls this all-day immersion in technology "being raised online." In fact, many of the young people surveyed reported keeping their phones on at night so they wouldn't miss out on any messages. That doesn't sound like anyone's idea of a good night's sleep.

Kids love new technology. They always have. And they're right to love a lot of it. The latest technological innovations offer amazing new possibilities. But when my experience at that high school has become the norm for many teachers, it's hard not to think that technology is taking over kids' lives.

Another new report, this one from researchers at Northeastern University in Boston, explains how marketers plan to take advantage of kids' technological dedication. According to the research, there is one device teens can't stand being without: their cell phones. And marketers are poised to take advantage, sending marketing messages at all hours of the day.

When you think about all the time today's kids spend texting and using other technology, you have to wonder: what are they NOT doing? One thing we know a lot of kids aren't doing is paying attention in class. Other research has shown that when students use a lot of media, they don't study as much or as well. Technology is crowding out important activities like exercise and even face-to-face-socializing.

There's nothing wrong with kids having cell phones. It can be a great way for parents to keep in touch with them during the day. But we have to help young people understand how to keep technology use inside the bounds of respectful and reasonable behavior. Tell your kids to turn off the phones in school and at night. There's a time and place for everything.

David Walsh, Ph.D. is the founder of the MediaWise Movement, a program of the National Institute on Media and the Family (www.mediawise.org). His latest book, No: Why Kids - of All Ages - Need to Hear It and Ways Parents Can Say It (Free Press) is available in bookstores.

 
 
 
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