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La Piana Consulting Blog

Kids Get Wired

By David La Piana

February 26, 2010

I recently saw two news stories on kids and computers that caused conflicting reactions.

The first was a research study reported in the New York Times last month. It found that American teens basically spend every waking hour when they are not in school either texting, tweeting, surfing, or on their cell phones. They are connected 24/7. And my mom used to complain that I watched too much TV (around 3 hours a night)!

The second article, also from the Times, appeared on February 11. It described a wired school bus in Tucson Arizona. The story claims that boisterous and rowdy kids were tamed by the installation of a wifi connection so they can now do their homework on the way to school.  But I wonder how much time these kids are spending sending emails, surfing the web and otherwise doing their thing, rather than editing History essays or submitting their Biology homework, as the story claims.

So here is the part where I am conflicted. I worry that so much time spent online reduces opportunities for creative thought, friendships in the flesh, and exercise. Is this worry justified or is it just the 21st century version of my mother’s concern that I was watching too much TV?

The opportunities to access information that teens and even younger kids have today are amazing, and whether they are ready for it or not, it is here. I recently read that a school somewhere was offering an online safety class for kindergarteners. Where does it end? Preschoolers lined up at baby Macs? Newborns lying in their cribs pushing their feet up to touch screen Internet-enabled virtual mobiles?

The most salient fact about all of this is our apparent helplessness to effect any change in our interaction with technology. We are, by mutual agreement, powerless. As soon as some new thing is created, we all flock to use it, whether we know how and why, or not. Will we someday make rational judgments about which technologies to embrace and conscious choices about how we spend our time, or are we simply consumers mesmerized by the next cool thing? And what does all of this mean or society?

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