Thursday, November 23, 2017

The Downside of Technology in Schools: A Substitute Teacher’s Perspective




I’ve been a substitute high school teacher for all of two weeks, but I’ve been able to sub in five different schools during this time. Subs don’t do much, I’ll admit, so while I babysit students as they’re working on whatever the regular teacher left for them to do, I’ve observed some common problems centered around technology. 

Two of the schools I sub in provides each student with a laptop. Yes, they can do their classwork online, but in City High School (names have been changed to protect my job), the teacher has no control over what the students are doing on their laptops during class. I roamed the rooms, observing plenty of kids on YouTube and Facebook, their assignments forgotten. In contrast, the Charter High School provides the teachers with a nice app on their desk top computers which shows what site is up each student’s laptop. It was easy to redirect the ones who weren’t on task. Far from providing its students with the latest technology, I believe City High School has opened a Pandora’s Box, foisting more distractions on an already distracted student body.

Let’s talk about cell phones. Every student has one. Even very young kids in elementary school have cell phones. If they’re allowed to have them out, the students are completely distracted the entire class. Teachers ask them to put their phones away, but it rarely happens because the phone is far more interesting than whatever is being taught. If I were a full-time teacher, I’d put a shoe caddy by the door and have the students place their phones in assigned pockets at the beginning of class. If they got bored, say after taking a test and waiting for the rest of the class to finish, I’d require them to bring a book. Yes, books! I rarely saw a student pull out a paperback to read when they were finished with classwork. I usually sub in English -- you know, literature? -- yet no more than two students in any class pulled out a book instead of their phone.

My own children thought I was mean when I said they couldn’t have a cell phone until they could pay for the monthly plan themselves. Poor things didn’t have phones until they were old enough to have jobs. Consequently, I have adult children who’ve figured out that their cells are tools, not entertainment. They use them sparingly, as needed, and two of my sons don’t see the need to have a cell phone at all. Not to say that I’m an exemplary parent on this issue because my sons spend way too much time on video games -- but at least this is something they can only do at home, not in a classroom.

Young people who are in college now are the first generation to be ‘plugged in.’ Their lives are centered around their devices. Is this access to all the information the world has to offer via Google a good thing? I would say no, and this is my opinion: Having a device in hand every waking moment of the day has given us a generation unable to think for themselves. On the news we are seeing college students protest capitalism as they take selfies with their iPhones, yet they fail to see the irony. They believe whatever they read on social media because they have no ability to apply logic, believing that emotion trumps reason when it comes to the law and social policy, unable to envision the disastrous consequences of governing by emotion. And it’s not just that they are unable to apply logic, they are unable to focus because they’re accustomed to being entertained. They are unable to converse at the dinner table because the text messages, Instagram posts, and Facebook comments are far more interesting than their family members. I’m seeing this in the high schools I sub in. The ‘plugged in’ generation is so distracted that they aren’t learning much in the classroom.  

On a different but related note, I have to throw in a thought about technology and my job as a substitute. The school system I work for employs its substitute teachers through a hiring agency. After a long application process and training, I gave them a list of the schools I preferred and the hiring service had me buy an app for my SmartPhone to accept positions as they became available. Within a week of missing alerts on this app, it became clear to me why the hiring agency had such a high turnover rate for subs: frustration. The subs must compete for positions like Uber drivers. I could only secure a position if the phone was in my hand, open to the app, at the right moment. If it took me more than three seconds to press ‘accept’ (no time to even read what subject I’d be teaching), someone else had the job. My husband put the app on his iPhone so we could improve my odds of securing regular work. What makes the agency’s job easier makes it frustrating for substitute teachers. I just wanted to share this tidbit because it shows how some technology can work against its own self-interest.

I’m not anti-technology (hey, I write science fiction) but I’m beginning to realize that more access to technology isn’t necessarily a good thing. Technology is a distraction in schools, and I believe teachers and parents need to monitor how much screen time students have. I don’t think a third-grader needs a cell phone, not even to call mommy in case of an emergency. No third-grader is going to be walking home alone in in the dark, necessitating the use of a cell for an emergency call. Nope, that third grader is going to use the iPhone you gave him or her to play games and access who-knows-what on the internet when he or she should be paying attention in class. Some schools even have a ‘bring your own device’ day -- what a terrible idea. How about ‘bring a book day’ instead? I recommend no cell phones during class, no phones at the dinner table, no phones while driving, no phones after bedtime -- plug them in to recharge elsewhere in the house -- limit computer and video game time to less than an hour a day or never on weekdays. Let’s close Pandora’s Box and raise children who like to read and use technology as a tool when it’s needed, not as the sole focus of their lives.

Kids need books, not gadgets. A child who reads will grow up to be a child who thinks for himself. It’s frightening to see how little the ‘plugged in’ generation thinks logically, particularly how little they know about history. “Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.” ~Edmund Burke. This is especially troubling when you hear college students extolling the virtues of socialism, but that’s another blog post for another day. 
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