Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Times are changing....I guess I should too.


I am a child of the 1980’s.  I learned to type on a typewriter; an actual real typewriter.  We pounded out the keys of each row, then patterns on the row, then multiple rows of the QWERTY typewriter to the beat of  “love me tender” by Elvis Presley.  I loved that class and the learning process. 

As the 80’s progressed, my family invested in a computer.  Times were crazy!  These little images of bars and balls going across the screen, programming and trying to remember how to change colors of the font and background, then, we had to turn in typed papers.  You hope you saved often because the computer would occasionally shut down and if you hadn’t saved, the work finished is GONE.  When I went to college, I took a word processor.  Problem #1: It would only hold some many “words” in the memory.  Problem #2: all of my work had to be more than the word allotment. 

My next fours years of college were spent trekking to and from computer labs all over campus.  I carried 3.5 disks around in my backpack.  Again, memory was limited compared to today’s standards, but I could fit a class worth of papers for a semester.  Life was good. 

Now, students leave for college with laptops and pads that have more memory on them that I could have ever imagined.  Students are blogging, making videos, playing games, music lists, and messaging friends all from one device.  We carry in our pockets and bags phones that make few phone calls, but can also send texts, take pictures and videos and send them around the world to friends and family in the blink of an eye. 

The point for all of this…..to rephrase what my dad always said, Times, they are a changing.  As technology shifts, so must we; the teachers, professors and parents of the next generation. Sometimes I argue, we want students to be more self-sufficient.  They should keep a calendar or an agenda.  Then I talk to a friend who checks her schedule on her phone that is linked to her husband’s phone and I am amazed at technology.  My next thought is, “we don’t let students use phones in class”.  If they could, would they use it for an agenda or calendar? A few teachers on campus “tweet” class homework everyday.  Isn’t that doing their work for them? Or, is it just the same as when I was in eighth grade and I had to check the board for that night’s homework?  Really, the goals and ideas are the same.  The tools are changing.  Updating myself to use these tools is my next goal.  

6 comments:

  1. I love the description you used to describe technology over your life. I also remember getting computers and the drastic changes along the way. I was on the tail end of these changes as I had a laptop for college. It still amazes me to think of even how the simplest things changed during my lifetime. At my house, we started with Nintendo, advanced to Sega, then to Nintendo 64, and Playstation 2, finally we got Wii. Those are not even all the game systems that came out over time. Those were just the ones we had in our family? There were so many advancements made every year in the 90s in video game equipment. Then there were video advancements as well. From VCRs to DVDs to Blueray and 3D to now streaming from online on your tv. Even just thinking of how we rented movies as children. No one goes to a video store anymore. Man, I miss Blockbusters. But as you said, technology is changing and it is time to change with it!

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    1. I agree with you about missing renting videos. I wonder hoe this affects the economy. Netflix is great and being able to watch things on your computer is awesome. Maybe someday we will have our tv and computer as one. The effects on the environment may be huge. People replacing their old tv's with flatscreen tv's then a computer-tv combo before they actually die just to have the "latest and greatest." I think about this with cell phones-IPHONES, etc.

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  2. I loved the post! I really appreciated the trip back.
    And I completely agree with the back and forth questions about making sure kids are self sufficient and not having technology do "too much" for them. I worry about that too. But as you described clearly in your first few paragraphs, technology is always going to change and I guess we should not fight it, but use it as tools to help us and the kids.
    Thanks!

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  3. Great blog! I remember the days of everything you mentioned, its especially crazy to think that I would have to log on to AOL to connect with my friends in high school and college and it would take FOREVER to get logged on. Now I am connected everywhere with my iPhone and I can access just about everything anytime of the day without the wait. I agree with Carolyn, I do miss Blockbusters ( it was so fun going and choosing a movie every friday night!), however it is such a great thing that technology is constantly changing!

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  4. I agree that things are changing quickly. At Cumberland Farms they have people using their IPHONE to buy gas with for a discount. The Chevrolet Sprint car alows you to plus you IPHONE into your car. I guess I need to upgrade my phone someday. Students will be so used to this technology, things we integrate into our classes will be easy for them.

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  5. Your voice is so strong Jen! I'm going to use you as a cross-curricular example of fabulous writing! :) Science teachers CAN write! Ha!

    I love your descriptions of your early days with technology and am completely with you on your concern for students self sufficiency. I worry that if we aren't the ones to draw the line then students will never be able to function without their technology. How will they look up an essay in a book of critical essays? Can they use a hard copy of an encyclopedia? Do they need to know that, though? I get confused. I love the idea of technology in the classroom and sometimes despise it as well. :)

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