Monday, September 5, 2016

I found myself intrigued by the question posed by Mr. Apple in his article. I think his point is quite prevalent and rather rare in the grand outlook concerning technology in a modern society. People should raise the question "why?" when aggressively encouraged to commit to a new and foreign avenue of life. While some may say that Mr. Apple only offers the negative aspects of a technologically fueled society, I would argue that the majority of arguments surrounding technology paint its use as an enlightened future with no drawbacks or limitations. I believe that Mr. Apple merely peels at the veneer of technology and offers a contrasting opinion to the overall argument. I think that differences of opinion are a healthy and necessary process to achieving a more beneficial outcome to any issue, and Mr. Apple seeks to apply this practice in his article. 

With regards to the experiment involving paper vs. tablet surveys, I'm not surprised in the slightest at the results the members received. There are times when I thoroughly prefer an iPad to a sheet of paper and vice versa. Technology is a tool and like any other tool it should be used to benefit the person who uses it. If a person finds more substance from using a pencil and paper, rather than a tablet, that person should be allowed the method that most comforts them and produces the best results. 

When I read the article on the advancements of robotic items, I was a little surprised. There are many television shows and movies that depict a world filled with automatic appliances and furniture, but to have these entities in a realm of reality takes a person aback to say the least. I'm not very old, and I remember a time without cellphones, laptops, Facebook, and large, cumbersome television sets. The advancement of technology has exponentially increased within the last few decades, and "Summon the comfy chairs!" only sheds more light on the ever-growing advancements in the technological field. 

I got the same impression from the article covering some of the latest inventions from 2015. I'm not completely appalled by the technology it shows, but by the frequency of its delivery. It used to take months, years, or even decades before a new form of technology became readily available to the grand public, but now the time-frames are completely condensed. Apple, Google, and Samsung release new cellphones at least twice a year, and the capabilities of the phones is mind-blowing. Again, I'm not very old, and I remember dial-up internet in my lifetime. Now a 3G network seems to take forever. 

The PBS study mostly confirmed for me what I already expected to be true. I'm not surprised to see that the majority of teachers find the use of technology to aid and simplify their teaching process. After all, that's the purpose of technology: to help make a person's life easier.         

1 comment:

  1. I have Apple's books and you should love it!! He is the scholar from the critical pedagogical field that proposes the educational
    inequity in schooling. He is not just talking about technology but
    the privilege demonstrates/reflects at schooling.
    The scenes from "WALL-E" pops out when I read the comfy chair article. Technology has a great impact on our life: it facilitates communication and learning at some degree; however, it also distances human interactions. How technology can be applied efficiently and properly in educational settings will be an angle that teachers need to take into account.

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