The Screen Free Week Matas Vaitkevicius Grade 6 “Oh my goodness, this is so distracting” *ping*, is what you say and hear when message after nonfiction shows up on your phone and you just say “Just one more minute” and then it's 3 in the morning when it was 12 in the afternoon when you were on your phone browsing the web. However there is an idea of having a screen free week which I would say this is an splendid idea so let me school you in some great parts of this of this. Obviously this is an massive distraction always messing you up and once you get one your phone and say “five more minutes” there is no turning back. Here is a quote from the author Keith Hampton she states in her passage from New York time she says they you learn is when
Studies have found that as the phone use increases, your attention goes elsewhere, “revealing that the more heavily student relied on their phones in their everyday lives, the greater the cognitive penalty they suffered” (Carr 3). The more focus a cell phone receives the more a person will suffer mentally. At UCSD around 520 students were given two standardized tests of intellectual acuity. “The only variable in the experiment was the location of the subjects’ smartphones. Some of the students.. place their phones in front of them on their desks; others were told to stow their phones in their pockets.. others were required to leave their phones in a different room” (Carr 3). The results from this study were conspicuous. It’s self-evident that anyone with phone insight had worst scores than those who didn't have their phones at all or had them in their pockets. Technology has take over us and it is draining our
Smart phones have become such an important part in our lives that we lose focus with or without them. When they’re in the palms of our hands we can’t seem to stop using it; when we don’t have
As much as I regret to admit it, I’m attached to my phone. I’m constantly reaching into my pocket to check the time, make sure I haven’t gotten a new update, or to send a message. I do this even when I’m not talking to anyone! It’s become an addiction, having to make sure I’m not missing anything, and I'm not the only one who has this problem. Seventy-five percent of the world population has a cell phone, and that number will only increase. With the creation of new technology portions of life have become easier. Technology has changed the way we go through life. It’s made talking to people easier, as well as keeping up with the lives of others. However, the effects have affected the aspects of our lives that don’t include technology.
Did you know “according to Diana zelikman there are 271 million mobile subscribers within the United States alone and the numbers are quickly growing?” Shut down your screen week is when the school doesn’t use technology and student doesn’t use technology at home. We should not shut down screen week because it will affect teachers planning, it will also affect student learning, and in case of an emergency the school wouldn’t be able to contact a family member.
I believe that schools should not participate in the “Shut Down Your Screen Week.” Since the beginning of the twentieth century many things have been automatized. Things like cars, cell phones, computers, and even vacuum cleaners. This is a start of evolution. That is for the good, or the worse, in my opinion, in unknown.
A family of four did 6 months without electricity and electronics. They did no electricity for a couple of weeks. The 3 kids Anni. Sussy, and Bill did better than expected. Anni went to the library to do work on computers and get books. Sussy had the hardest time and her grades improved considerably. Bill for fun played the saxophone and later in his life he went to college and studied music.
A. Attention Getter: Four Years of your life is wasted to what’s sitting inside all of your pockets right now; your cellphone. The average person spends roughly 90 minutes a day playing on their phone, whether it’s checking emails, Snapchatting or scrolling through your Twitter feed. According to The Dailymail.com we unlock our phones at least 110 times per day! We’ve become almost dependent on these devices over time, and it needs to stop. We rely on our phones everyday to wake us up for school and to know the time of day.
Being distracted by your phone for a split second can not only change your life forever, but possibly someone else’s around you. Checking to see texts, answering calls or seeing the latest tweet has become more important than road safety. Society is forgetting how to communicate with each other without the use of technology. While sitting in a waiting room or standing in an elevator, take a look around you. In todays society, rather than talking to each other we are more inclined to use out cell phones to pass the time.
You can get into a car accident if your’ re not paying attention to the road. People should
Xiomara, I agree with your analysis about this topic; it isn't an everyone once in a while problem, it's an everyday problem. Everyone around the world is basically committing suicide over a message or call that could wait an hour or less. Likewise, many do not realize that they can easily pull over and read the message or make the call; but they do not. We are obviously in a very faced paced society, and it doesn't stop, even if it means your life. "Texting And Distracted Driving Infograaphic" reports that "77% of young adults are confident when texting and driving," this number is absolutely alarming. As a result, this essay is what stood out among the others in this week's readings. It is terrifying to realize that I could start to walk
When sending a text message while you are driving your eyes leave the road for an average of 4.6 seconds. It may not seem like much time, but a lot can happen in that small amount of time. In five seconds, a silver Toyota 4 Runner can tap the left side of your green Honda Civic at 65 miles per hour and send you flying across a freeway. In five seconds a car can travel the distance of a football field. In five seconds your neighbor’s daughter can run out into the street to grab her soccer ball as you back out of your driveway. What if you were not paying full attention to what you were doing? What if you were trying to dial a phone number on your cell while trying to back up? What if you did not see
It is said that smartphones are a substantial distraction and cause us to make poor judgements (Journal of Experimental Psychology, Human Perception & Performance).
People get distracted all the time by phones firstly, people get distracted a lot on their phones, tablets, computers, and any other piece of technology from the real life world. Technology keeps us all away from your family and friends. This can be very distracting when you can just be going outside with your friends and go do something else like play sports or play tag. Technology is way to distracting in these days because people don't even care about what is happening to the world anymore instead they are just sitting on their couch on
You go out to dinner with your parents at a restaurant, you sit at your table and shortly after the waitress comes over for you to order drinks. Upon ordering you proceed to take out your phone and browse through social media or reply to texts, how many of us can relate to this? The majority of us have probably done this at some point and maybe do it often. Perhaps we have done this when we are out with our friends and they try talking to you, or the taking out our phones in class while the teacher is giving a lecture. Social media is on the rise.
Paying attention may be the hardest thing to do in this App-friendly world. With current trend in social media, the news, and the internet. Our attention span has gone from "12 minutes in 2001 to 5 minutes 2011"( Vidyarthi, 201, p. 1). It tends bombard people with information and as a result our brains are starting to adapt. In a book by Nicholas Carr 'THE SHALLOWS: WHAT THE INTERNET IS DOING TO OUR BRAINS' . He said after talks with Neuroscientists and psychologists is that our brains are "Very malleable, they adapt at the cellular level to whatever we happen to be doing. And so the more time we spend surfing, and skimming, and scanning ... the more adept we become at that mode of thinking" (Carr, 2010, p. 1). Leading to people thinking that their good at multitasking. With more social research being put into technology more scientists and other professionals are finding that multitasking is bad for you. like driving and texting which is still on the rise. Another example: I'm hearing more and more often from one of my friends or somebody else about going out on a date or talking to someone. Then the other person pulls out their cell phone and starts texting in the middle of the conversation. Even some of my own friend do this to me