Sunday, October 6, 2013

The Advantages and Disadvantages of Children’s Use of Technology

I want to touch on a familiar topic that you may find interesting: technology and children. Many of you may think that technology is great and that all children should be able to use the different technologies out there, while some of you feel that technology has held our children back from reaching their full potentials. In the last discussion forum in my class, the professor asked three questions about the use of technology by children, and they all got me to thinking about the benefits and disadvantages of technology:
  • What are some of the things a parent can do to maximize the benefits of technology with their children while minimizing the harmful effects from technology?
  • One of the readings this week talked about imagination in children being replaced by PCs. Do you agree with this generalization? If so, what can we do to encourage imaginative play in our children?
  • Several of the readings suggested that technology appears to be somewhat intuitive to small children today. On the other hand, it is increasingly complex to older people. The only similarity is how the old and young consume online content is that both groups tend to be very "trusting" and somewhat naive when dealing with online content. What can parents, educators and scholars do to help warn the very young and old about the dangers of digital communications?

These three questions raise some very important issues concerning children and technology. I would be remiss not to write on this subject, especially considering my husband and I have three children.

Technology seems to have taken over every aspect of our lives, including our children’s lives. Our children are ages 7, 6, and 3, and they all know how to use our cell phones, tablets, and laptop to a degree respective to their ages. One of our main concerns as parents is making sure that these media platforms are beneficial to our children’s education and imaginations. Too often, we see children that know how to operate digital technology but have trouble reading, writing, and thinking critically. Our boys are old enough to watch shows like SpongeBob, Power Rangers, Sanjay and Craig, etc., all of which we feel do not give them any educational benefits, but they want to visit the websites for these shows to play games associated with the shows, and sometimes we indulge them. I am fine with the games on Nickelodeon’s website because there are games that challenge them to strategize and to think critically, but I have banned them from logging on to Cartoon Network, because there are too many shows on that channel that are highly inappropriate for children to watch. 

One of our rules we set for our children when using these media is to look at something educational. I feel it is our responsibility to ensure that they visit websites and use apps that offer enrichment. My boys’ teachers give us websites that we can use at home, like www.starfall.com and www.ABCya.com, that offer additional practice on all the subjects they study in school. I also signed up for ABCMouse.com so that my three-year-old can learn even more than what we and her Head Start teachers are already teaching her. I especially like ABCMouse.com because it teaches her all of the fundamentals a preschooler should know in preparation for kindergarten, and it teaches her the basics of how to use a wired mouse. There are also toys that incorporate different technological advances to teach children basics like ABCs, 123s, shapes, colors, and emotions. My daughter has three different stuffed animals that teach her these things through song and dance. One of them, the LeapFrog My Pal Violet, actually teaches her how to spell her name. Cool, huh? With all of this computer time and involvement with technology, there comes the need for boundaries, especially on time limits, on what they play with,  and on what they are viewing. 

(from left to right) My daughter's Fisher Price Laugh & Learn Love to Play Puppy (http://www.fisher-price.com/en_US/brands/laughandlearn/products/30407), her VTech Peek at Me Bunny (http://www.vtechkids.com/product/detail/1939/Peek_at_Me_Bunny), and her Leapfrog My Pal Violet (http://shop.leapfrog.com/leapfrog/jump/My-Pal-Scout-%26-Violet/productDetail/Toddler-Toys-Sale/lfprod19156/cat800014?selectedColor=&selectedSize=&navAction=push&navCount=0&categoryNav=false)
Without these boundaries, children become addicted into the digital world and miss life and opportunities for learning and imaginative play. Don’t get me wrong, technology is awesome and there is nothing wrong with it. It is the use and abuse of technology that causes problems. Often, I see how parents plop their children in front of a TV and allow their children to watch cartoons for hours on end, while parents with older children fail to check their children’s use of PCs, mobile phones, and other digital devices. Why is this a common occurrence? We can attribute this to the fact that many of us parents came of age during the Internet age (McMillan & Morrison, 2008, p. 78), and our children are reaping the benefits of advanced technology.

I was born in the 1980s, and I witnessed the birth of the Internet and its slow but steady rise in popularity. I remember when we first had access to the Internet in my computer science class, which was back in the mid-1990s. As I think back, I see how amazing the Internet seemed in our eyes, and it was equally awe-inspiring when we were able to search for different topics and get the information we were looking for.  As I got older, I used the Internet more and more, especially to write research papers, but more so to connect with my friends on the new social media sites that were appearing (i.e. MySpace, hi5, kiwibox). Looking back, I see how I was slowing becoming addicted, to an extent, to the use of the Internet. In their article, “Coming of age with the Internet,” which was published in New Media and Society in 2008, Sally J. McMillan and Margaret Morrison discuss the Internet and its integration into the lives of those people who grew up alongside the Internet. Their study found that many of the “participants saw themselves as relative dinosaurs by comparison to their younger relatives who are learning technology at a much younger age” (McMillan & Morrison, 2008, p. 80). We see this to be true in our children now, who are growing up as technological innovations emerge on the scene.

With so many innovations and with so much technology integrated in our lives, especially through PCs, it is easy to suggest that our children’s imaginations are slowing being replaced with PCs. However, I disagree with this generalization, because I have witnessed in my own children how computers have enhanced their imaginations. My children all know how to use digital technology to some extent, and I have noticed how once they finish using the computer, cell phone, or tablet, they will go outside or to their room and play out what they have learned on the educational apps or websites they had visited. They took what they learned and integrated it into their daily play. 

In her TED video, Shilo Shiv Suleman describes Khoya, an interactive book app that allows children to enter the stories they read. This app works by integrating the app and actual outdoor play, “linking together magic, the earth and technology” (Suleman, 2011, “Using tech”). I thought this was an awesome idea, because children of this generation, many of them having grown up along with the Internet, have become so technically dependent and integrated that they have no idea what it means to have fun without some type of digital hardware. They do not know how to go outside and use their imaginations. Parents could use apps like these to encourage and enhance imaginative play and critical thinking in their children.

With the ready availability of technology, it is easy for our children to fall into danger. There are several predators out in the world that look for naïve, unsuspecting children to prey on, so it is very important that we as parents, educators, and scholars make sure that the proper programs and parental controls are put in place to block inappropriate content. This is easy to do with younger children, but trying to do this poses a greater problem with older children and teenagers. In their article, “The Role of Mobile Phones in Family Communication,” which was published in Children and Society in 2009, Kerry Devitt and Debi Roker found that “many young people and parents considered that a young person might have a sense of ‘false security’ in having a mobile phone, and take more risks as a result” (p. 200). 

I found this to be true because I also felt that same sense of security with my cell phone as a teenager. The authors also found that parents believed that “they had less control over their child’s private life as a result of mobile phones, and were often wary about what might be being planned without their knowledge. I also took more risks than I normally would because I had a cell phone. In hindsight, I see how I had too much freedom as a teenager with my cell phone and put myself in danger with the blatant disregard for my safety because of trusting in its ability to connect me to safety (i.e. my parents, the police). Again, boundaries come into play, as they are key to ensuring our children’s safety in the digital world.

Technology provides users with so many opportunities to do great things, and it is a great asset to have in the home and in schools, especially for our children. It gives parents the ability to enhance their children’s minds and foster imaginative play, and it gives educators the tools they need to enrich their class curricula. Technology has its many advantages, but there are also risks involved with using it, so it is imperative that parents and educators find ways to protect their children and students from the potential pitfalls of technology. I believe that a hybrid of technology and “normal” child’s play is our best bet for ensuring that our children have the best of both worlds. Don’t you agree?

References

Devitt, Kerry & Debi Roker. (2009). “The role of mobile phones in family communication.” Children and Society 23: 189-202. DOI: 10.1111/j.1099-0860.2008.00166.x

McMillan, Sally J. & Margaret Morrison. (2008). “Coming of age with the Internet: A qualitative exploration of how the Internet has become an integral part of young people’s lives.” New Media and Society 8(1): 73-95. DOI: 10.1177/1461444806059871

Suleman, Shilo Shiv. (2011, December). “Using tech to enable dreaming.” TED Conferences, LLC. Podcast retrieved from http://www.ted.com/talks/shilo_shiv_suleman_using_tech_to_enable_dreaming.html?quote=1330

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