In this day and age, technology rules the world. Everywhere you look technology is being used for something, big or small by adults and even small children. However, the people who tend to utilize technology consistently are students and young adults for the World Wide Web. The majority of the time students are using the World Wide Web as a resource to obtain information for their academic work. The World Wide Web hinders a student 's learning and the quality of their work. The Web is a power force everywhere, but not with education. The web does not provide or guarantee positive effects on education. Access to the web decreases the student’s critical thinking skills, accuracy of work and basic grammar skills thus affecting their …show more content…
This is a common problem among students, especially young students utilizing these websites. When it comes down to producing academic work, those grammar and usage errors we make on these websites goes into the work resulting in a low grade. The web is not completely trustworthy with education and the quality of a student’s work. It’s true that sometimes too much of a good thing is bad for you. It changes learning priorities, it’s a distraction due to pop-ups and ads which can derail the student from their task at hand. The web has made it much simpler for them to retrieve information and answers for tests, homework, essays. The students are not being challenged when everything is given to them on silver platter. By students using the web for education purposes, it can hinder them and affect the quality and accuracy of their work. The web is also a distraction. I notice that I have a hard time staying focused on what I am doing because of pop up ads and other things like emails or texts. For example, while researching for a paper I might see something else that grabs my attention because the web is not completely filtered. Also, notifications from social media can pop up on any window whether that website is opened in another tab or not. That is a big distraction and for a student, especially teenage students. It can be quite difficult to fight the
According to By Rainie and Hitlin (2005), “there is agreement among teens and their parents about the role that the internet plays in teens’ education. Eighty-six percent of teens, and 88% of online teens, believe that the internet helps teenagers to do better in school. Eighty percent of parents and 83% of parents of online teens agreed with that proposition”. Wright (n.d) shares that “the Internet contains a wealth of knowledge that is available instantly upon any search. Because of this, the Internet has superseded libraries as a source for information gathering and research. Many teachers will now ask students to visit specific websites to study from home, and online encyclopedias provide masses of knowledge on almost every topic imaginable. The variety of sources allows students to pursue subjects in much greater detail rather than being limited to whatever the teacher sends home”.
The Net Effects on Students. It has been observed that the net has strongly influenced students, whether good or bad the effects are extreme. In the article “Will the Net Replace Thinking?” by Laura session stepp, it is explained how the internet has affected students in their way of thinking and the way of doing school work. She explained some advantages, but mostly disadvantages of using the internet.
Growing up as a child I've always used the internet as a source to chat with my friends and family online, to do my homework, and play games. I’ve been on the internet since I was 10 years old. It’s a reliable source I always go to answer my questions. Our society now relies on the internet to answer all of our questions on a daily basis. In Nicholas Carr article his beliefs are that the internet has changed our society in many ways and it has created a negative effect to our way of thinking. However, the internet has provided a positive interaction to college students knowledge, such as YouTube videos offering tips on how to fix things, learn different languages, and how to solve classroom related problems.
In this new age of technology, information is becoming more readily available to practically everyone. This revolution has raised one major concern for the students of our generation: that we will not be able to think at all. That this generation will rely so heavily on the ability to access information immediately that we subsequently lose the ability to think for ourselves. This will not happen, however. Although many believe the internet is spoiling our generation, the fact of the matter is that the internet actually enriches our education and aids us in coming up with more educated solutions.
As an advocate for technology in higher education, I have heard similar warnings for years. Indeed, some who read Carr’s article may believe that he has hit the nail on the head. There is no question that our habits are changing. The Web has captured our attention and is now the default starting point for almost all work. The Web is different in almost all aspects from a book. Printed books have contained the essential truths of humanity for half a millennium. The Web is where we look for knowledge
Libraries virtually depend on the internet anymore for any number of things, book orders, late fees, accounts, newsletters. Schools are even more intertwined with this fabulous technology, there’s a computer in every classroom. Students are now free to access a virtual infinity of data whenever they need a report on John Adams, or can use the library computers to requisition a book on the Panama Canal. Even teachers use the internet for research, pulling crucial info from reliable research websites and online news centers. As a research companion, the internet is essential, a powerful, never ending library of useful information and resource.
Instead of social media, the Internet is also a kind of technology which benefits education by improving one’s knowledge through an easy access of information. Because of the advanced technology, the Internet has become a useful tool for education. In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, Larry Page who founded Google states, “Google is really trying to build artificial intelligence and to do it on a large scale” (5). There is no doubt that online search engines are as smart as human, or even smarter than us. Because of this, we tend to get help from the Internet to do our work. For example, students may surf the Internet for information and use the online calculator for solving mathematical problems. It is really a beneficial
The World Wide Web had revitalized education by making it easier, and more efficient to teach. Before the creation of the Internet, the most popular and widely used way of teaching was mainly with books and lectures, limiting the speed and efficiency of information to learn, while also limiting the number of units given in a school year. With the Internet, teachers were able to discover and teach topics easily, leading to quicker lessons and topics as they use the web browser and online sources to benefit the speed of the lessons as well as better the students in different ways to educate. In addition to teachers using the Internet, students also greatly used it to help with homework, to fully understand a topic, to help with projects, and to communicate with their teachers. In a study from Pew Internet & American Life Project over students and their interaction with the
Boston, MA: Heinle/Cengage Learing. Carr’s article, “Does the Internet Make you Dumber,” is about how the Internet affects people. The author explains that overusing the Internet will cause constant distractions and interruptions also turning people into bad thinkers and readers. In addition, he gives many results of research to certify his opinion that the Internet brings a bad influence, which weakens students’ learning ability, even though the Internet changes human’s lives.
The internet is changing our brain for the worse. While we get to communicate with each other better and have a lot of information at our fingertips, we lose many important things as well. We are quick to congratulate the success of Google and Apple that we miss the real danger. Nicholas Carr shows us how we aren't seeing the real danger of the internet and he tells us what we are sacrificing for the internet. He explains to us how the internet is making us easily distracted, removes our ability to think linearly, and weakens our capability to learn.
The internet is something that has affected the last few generations. Today's students are affected immensely because they are young, impressionable, and exposed to many more resources through the internet. In Andrea Lunsford’s article, “Our Semi-Literate Youth? Not So Fast,” she and her research team prove that, when used wisely, the internet is not harming students and enhancing their writing skills. In Nicholas Carr's article, “Hal And Me,” he writes through personal and second hand experiences about how the internet is reducing people's ability to absorb information. Many people have different opinions on technology. The ongoing debate is whether or not the internet is affecting people, mostly the younger generations, in a bad way or in a good way.
While there might be more downsides to the internet there are some people that want to believe that it is very beneficial to society. She explains how the intern et has given schools the ability to broaden their curriculum to a wider spectrum. Teachers in classrooms K-12 use the internet as a research or reference tool for their assignments and other coursework. She done a study that has shown that internet use can increase success in the classroom. Online classes and internet use in the classroom has been proven to broaden students’ ability to be more social and technically incline. Her studies have also shown that it gets the students more interested in school work by making it more fun for them. “Students who have more self-confidence with the internet have better success in online classes and have higher grades than others who feel uncomfortable with the internet” (119). While the internet isn’t always good it has helped kids think more outside the box (Ronsisvalle and Watkins
Every day the world is changing and things are done differently. Technology has also affected the way students are taught and in which they learn. It has changed the classroom. Technology saves us time and allows us to access material in only minutes. “The Internet and online subscription databases, even as a supplement to the printed works in the library, allow students to see, and force them to consider or reject, points of view that they might never have encountered in decades past” (Gow 4).With all the time technology produces, it also has downsides and it also may have created a less intelligent society.
In conclusion, the influence of internet hangs over the world of education and creates effects on thinking patterns, concentration and the social skills of students. Under the growing trend of the digital campus, the negative effects of the internet in education can be
The Internet is the key to development. In the United States, the Internet has a positive effect on education. It has broadened the amount and kind of resources accessible for research, provided students successful techniques for collaboration (discourse boards and forums), and has allowed for social networking to become not as formal and more widespread. The internet has the potential to be an enormous force for augmentation by giving fast and inexpensive information. It has turned into an instructive means for students, expanded communication, and allowed learning of all subjects to be shared.