Though I may be dating
myself by this anecdote, I feel compelled to share it anyway in order to
demonstrate how far our society has progressed along the road of the
Information Age in the past decade. Whenever I was assigned an essay in 5th
grade, I was forced to take a trip to the bookshelves in the basement, locate the
shelf creaking under the weight of the enormous Encyclopedia series, run my
finger along the alphabetized titles until I found the desired word category,
summon all my strength to pull out the gigantic volume, heave it onto the
floor, flip through the pages and then proceed to laboriously copy out the
encyclopedic entry using paper and a pencil. I would then use this information
in my essay to make it more credible and informative. That is how it was done
when I was ten years old, and for this reason I loathed writing essays.
Now, obviously,
things are different. As I stated in my last post on this subject, all I need
to do now to supply my essays with authoritative sources and facts is to open
up my MacBook Pro, get onto Google, type a few words, and there, I have sources
and facts in abundance, usually more than I ever want or need. We possess a
wealth of information literally at our fingertips, and this is truly amazing to
one who has grown up watching the progress of this Information Age unfold.
The internet has
undeniably altered the way that our society learns, thinks, understands, and
researches. Some argue that this change has been for the worse - that because
of the internet, now we have shorter attention spans, weaker memorization skills,
and shallow minds incapable of deep thought. However true these claims may be,
we also can learn much more quickly, we can access a multitude of data in a
matter of seconds, we can multi-task easily, we can understand the complex
mathematical and physical science that is computer programming, we are able to
connect with more people and different cultures around the world, and save so
much time and effort through the use of Google, Bing, and Wikipedia. Perhaps we
retain less information, but why do we need to? The information is at our
fingertips at all times. The internet is not making us less smart, it is
"simply challenging us to become smarter in new ways." ("Is the
Internet Making Us Smarter or Dumber? Yes.", by Matthew Ingram, June 6th,
2010, Gigaom.com)
First of all, simply
take a moment to stop and contemplate the overwhelming and exhaustive amount of
data that exists on cyberspace purely for our cognitive benefit. Contemplating
Google alone is enough to blow one's mind. You can literally ask anything,
("Does God exist?", "How do I freeze strawberries?",
"Why should I get married?", and "Where can I find Tom's
shoes?" are just a few search suggestions that I've seen, meaning that
someone out there has actually asked Google these ridiculous questions,) and
receive a million answers in a few seconds. Frequently at the dinner table when
my little brother asks my dad some random question about why the toilet bubbles
when it flushes or what year King Peter the Great died, all my dad has to do it pull
out his iphone and find the answer. Our essays and articles are more thoroughly
researched and the quality and quantity of our daily information intake is much
improved. If the internet is not making us smarter, it is certainly making us
much more well-informed.
Along those lines I
propose my second support of the thesis that that internet is not making us
stupider; the internet has proved to be a valuable asset to education. Not only
are vast amounts of historical and scientific data available for easy access to
the student, but helpful learning websites, educational software, and school
gadgets exist in abundance. Throughout high school I benefited enormously
through website programs such as Sparknotes' study guides, Collegeboard's
SAT and CLEP prep, StudyBlue's easy and efficient online flashcards, and
Rosetta Stone's online language games. Reading and writing have become more
central to our culture with the use of email, blogs, twitter, facebook, online
newspaper sites, and yes, even texting. We can say what we want to say more
quickly and efficiently.
Thus teens like me, though
accused of being shallow-minded zombies addicted to the internet, have
benefited perhaps more than any other social group from its use, because we've
had myriads of sources to aid our learning. We've learned quickly how to best
utilize those sources; we've been able to connect more widely with people all
over the world through social networking sites; we've been able to virtually travel to
places we never dreamed of; and we've been able to freely share our ideas,
express our opinions, and publish our thoughts via the internet. For these
purely selfish reasons I'm thankful to have had the internet as an additional
teacher during high school.
What about the
accusation that before the internet people were smarter, more learned, more
educated, and less distracted? Well to this I can only retort that even during
the Middle Ages shallow distractions existed in abundance as well: they always
will exist where shallow minds can be found to desire them. This is pure human
nature. The internet has given knowledge to those with the wisdom to desire it,
just as Gutenberg's printing press gave the Bible to religious and devout
individuals. But Gutenberg's printing press also eventually gave issue to cheap
sensation newspapers, vulgar fiction and erotic novels, just as the internet is
also the source of much pornographic material, misleading advertisements, and shallow
distractions. (Angry Birds, anyone??) Something as multi-faceted as the
internet cannot be blamed for lowering the IQ level of an entire society. If
you are unfocused, scatterbrained, or have weak memorization skills, don't
blame the internet - blame yourself. There is a lot of knowledge and learning
to be found on the internet if you have the discipline and focus to search for
and find it.
My final conclusion then, is the same as the title of an online article by
Matthew Ingram; "Is the Internet Making Us Smarter or Dumber? Yes."
There are numerous good things and numerous bad things about the internet, so
its goodness or badness really depends upon how you, as an individual, choose
to utilize it. In fact the internet is so double-sided that I discovered I am
not the only one to write a debate on the subject - the Wall Street Journal
also recently published two articles arguing opposing views about whether the
internet is making us smarter or more ignorant. As Ingram concluded his article;
"To the extent that we want to use them to become more intelligent, they
are doing so; but the very same tools can just as easily be used to become
dumber and less informed, just as television can, or the telephone or any other
technology, including books." But the advantages, I believe, certainly
outweigh the disadvantages. We don't outlaw all books because some of the books
contain superficial or inappropriate material, and with the same logic, we can
make the best use of all the wonderful things that the internet has to offer.
1 comment:
I can comment Mo, why can't you??
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