Geting Wise About Technology
Head for the Edge, Technology Connection, September 1995
What’s wrong with these pictures?
Literacy, especially technological literacy, is more than knowing just how to do something: it is also knowing when to do it! Technology should be used on the job only when it allows a person to be more efficient, or to do worthwhile things which would be otherwise impossible.
Technology increases efficiency in two ways. It helps you do the same things you’ve always done but more quickly or more economically, or it allows you to use the same amount of time to do more. A really efficient use of technology would let you do more with less.
E-mail, word processing, and computerized databases of inventories, phone numbers and addresses increase my efficiency. But so does handwriting envelopes, using a paper datebook and looking up the definition of a word in my pocket dictionary.
There are plenty of places schools can use technology to do things they otherwise could not. Key word searches are impossible in a paper card catalog. The chance of reaching reluctant learners is greatly improved with involving computer programs. Concepts which are nearly impossible to verbally comprehend can be illustrated with videotapes or computer animations. Spelling checkers can keep mechanics from getting in the way of a student (and teacher) ideas. But I question what computerized integrated learning systems and a video distribution systems do for students that worksheets and stand-alone VCRs cannot.
There are also times when you may not want technology to supplant other, more human ways of getting a job done. Answering machines during school hours, grammar checkers, and Internet “filters” do not (yet?) have the judgment, intelligence or sensitivity to be effective. I have a difficult time trusting a machine to make decisions which depend on taste, values, respect, or empathy!
Check your syllabi! Are you also teaching when to use technology?
SIDE BAR QUOTE
I use a computer. This enables me to be highly efficient. Suppose for example I need to fill up column space by writing BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER. To accomplish this in the old precomputer days, I would have had to type ‘”BOOGER” five times.
But now all I have to do is type it once, then simply hold the left-hand “mouse” button down while “dragging” the “mouse” so that the “cursor” moves over the text that I wish to “select”; then release the left-hand “mouse” button and position the “cursor” over the “Edit” heading on the “menu bar”; then click the left-hand “mouse” button to reveal the “edit menu” ; then position the “cursor” over the “Copy” command; then click the left-hand “mouse” button; then move the “cursor” to the point where I wish to insert the “selected” text; then click the left-hand “mouse” button; then position the “cursor” over the “Edit” heading on the “menu bar” again; then click the left-hand “mouse” button to reveal the “edit menu”; then position the “cursor” over the “Paste” command; then click the left-hand “mouse” button four times; and then, as the French say, “voila!” (Literally, “My hand hurts!”)
If you need this kind of efficiency in your life, you should get a computer.
from Dave Barry’s column, “Only stud hombre cybermuffins can handle DOS and Windows”