The tools we have at our fingertips to stay connected and to instantly find information are truly incredible. Yet I know from personal experience how easy it is to abuse these tools and waste a heck of a lot of time. This fascinating video by Frontline really explores how technology is changing not only our behaviors but also our brains. At one point, a professor at MIT talks about her personal experience of a typical technology filled day. Going through emails, organizing her calendar, and doing various other internet related things makes her feel great. Really on top of things. Then she realizes that the day is gone and she hasn’t done anything significant, hasn’t thought about anything hard. (The entire video is a long but riveting 90 minutes.)
When humans adapted to the written word, we soon lost the ability to memorize and repeat vast amounts of knowledge passed down orally from person to person. But it appears that we managed just fine and now use books to replace our diminished capacity to memorize. With technology and mulittasking becoming the norm, we may be losing the ability to focus on one thing at a time and think deeply about things without distraction. Fast Company also recently had a great article about how some kinds of multitasking costs you more time than you save.
We are immigrants to the digital world, but our kids are natives. Are we doing them a huge disservice by allowing them to use available technology at a very young age? Are we unwittingly creating the dumbest generation? Or is this just a natural progression of the human race with changes that are inevitable like those that took place after discovery of the written word?
As a mom of 2 tweenage boys, I constantly worry about the internet and too much “screen time”. When I say no more tv, they move to the computer. Chased away from computers, they move to their ipods or confiscate my Blackberry to play games. Even doing homework on a computer is not safe unless the internet is somehow turned off and they are not constantly interrupted by friends wanting to “chat”.
A big part of the problem was that the kids would take laptop computers to their rooms to do homework and ended up doing who knows what else for who knows how long! Yesterday, we finally took action and officially made a permanent home for our two laptop computers right in the study. Now all computer use is in a public space and the place where I spend the most time is also the place they do their homework. I guess we are all pioneers in this new world of technology and will have to adapt to the digital wilderness as we go!








