All
around my high school, I hear voices repeating all they've seen or heard
through media. Jingles quoting Rick Asley's Never
Gonna Give You Up, SpongeBob's The F.U.N.
Song and Taylor Swift's Shake It Off
bounce through the halls. Even obscure, nonsensical shouts of "JOHHHHNNN
CEENNA!" echoed in my ears one class period when my teacher stepped out of
the room for a moment.
Sometimes,
we get the reference, remember something rather funny and laugh it away. Other
times we get annoyed to the point of grinding our teeth and form fantasies of
whipping around to growl two simple words, "Shut up,"
Where
do we get these odd coined phrases, and why do we feel compelled to repeat
them? Ask any person, and they'll shrug and say that it's funny. However, the media
could actually imprint the things we find "funny" onto our memories
to the point we think of them first instead of formulating an original
conversation starter.
While
it's true that simple "gifs," "memes" and references
implanting in memories are rarely dangerous, technology's lasting footprint on
our brain has far worse effects. Recent studies find that the way we depend
upon our devices actually alters the composition of our brains when it comes to
simple problem solving situations.
Technology
wires some students so much that they fear math without a calculator and
believe themselves incapable of strong mental solving skills. Technology is in
our classrooms, in our phones and at our fingertips, leaving elementary
principles such as simple multiplication tables up to twelve or carrying digits
in the dust.
When I
listened to my fellow classmates after we finished our PSAT, I heard scattered but constant claims of this:
"I
BOMBED
that part without the calculator. I didn't get any of that."
What
does this mean for these students in college if they don't change now? Being
average or lower at math is a curse when that calculator is inches away, making
your hand itch to grab it.
To my
surprise, I recently discovered that the calculator curse doesn't only affect
the struggling and average students negatively.
Just
last week, when I attended Math Honors Society tutoring, FIVE tutors said that
they couldn't tell me how to solve my homework problem without a calculator. I
protested immediately to their solution that I could just punch it in because my
teacher wouldn't allow a calculator on my midterm the next day.
I
received a frown and an "I don't know what else to do," before they
began wracking their brains for the lost lesson they failed to retain.
Thirty
minutes of internet searches and five minutes of explanation later, I finished
two problems with a tutor. It bothered me to the bone. They were the best math
students in my school, recognized for their achievements, and even they
preferred the supposed lesser of two evils. Developers of the device like
Willhelm Schickard and Blaise Pascal invented calculators to assist mathematicians,
not act in their place. Our modern times are proof that their meaning is butchered, along with those of countless other inventors.
This
leads me into an article titled Why
Johnny Can't Add Without A Calculator. The author offers many valid criticisms towards
technology's effect on human skill level but puts their main point quite simply:
"Math and science can be hard to learn--and that's OK. The proper job of a teacher is not to make it easy, but to guide students through the difficulty by getting them to practice and persevere."
The logic itself is simpler than its application. We need to instill in our students that they must build up their problem solving stamina and creativity to look for different solutions on their own without pounding endlessly away on plastic buttons. Encouraging the study and memorization of the in-depth details is better for students in the long run. It will take longer to teach and learn. Despite that, it will stop embarrassing moments like the aforementioned incident of the five honors students.
We want our students confident in problem solving and their ability to think for themselves. The best way to mold our future complex thinkers and innovators for success, while preserving their dignity along the way, is to wean them off using technology as a first resort instead of as a necessary one.
Citations:
- Kakaes, Konstantin. "Why Johnny Can’t Add Without a
Calculator ." N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Oct. 2015. <http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2012/06/math_learning_software_and_other_technology_are_hurting_education_.html>. - "The History of the
Calculator ." The History of the Calculator. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Oct. 2015. <http://www.thecalculatorsite.com/articles/units/history-of-the-calculator.php>. - "The Struggle For Productive Struggle." Emergent
Math . N.p., n.d. Web. <http://emergentmath.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/calvinandsusie.jpg>.
I loved reading your train of thought today! You give such great specific examples right from the hallway of your school, segueing right into your primary points about math. Nice work!
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