Anonymous wrote:My elementary and middle school-aged children all have entirely screen-free educations. They don't have phones or ipads either. It's...amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
This.
There were a number of phases btwn slate/chalk and screens. I’d personally like to go back to pen/paper, text books, and physically present teachers who actually teach.
Textbooks are heavy, outdated and dumb. No need for them when we have the internet. Agility is a plus in education.
What’s the point of pen and paper in a digital age?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
You will when you see the absolute morons that the next generation is turning out to be. They can't focus on anything at all.
It’s not about school chromebooks. It’s about lazy parenting, young kids who “need” smartphones and iPads every day at home. Sorry. Parents don’t like hearing it and want to deflect blame elsewhere, but it’s the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
You will when you see the absolute morons that the next generation is turning out to be. They can't focus on anything at all.
It’s not about school chromebooks. It’s about lazy parenting, young kids who “need” smartphones and iPads every day at home. Sorry. Parents don’t like hearing it and want to deflect blame elsewhere, but it’s the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
Boy are you going to be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
You will when you see the absolute morons that the next generation is turning out to be. They can't focus on anything at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
Boy are you going to be surprised.
At what?
My kids grew up with screens in the classroom, one just graduated UVA Summa Cum Laude and has a professional services job in Manhattan where she is thriving (and working with screens, match). The other is a junior at Virginia Tech and also thriving. She is working toward a career in public health.
The kids will be ok.
If your kids are grown, then they are not the same as the kids that are learning to read on laptops by playing a game where you have to rapidly jump a rabbit to get to the right phonetic sound - or fight another penguin to get to do a math problem. But you definitely will want to do something about it before your grandchildren get to school because they will also not learn if this continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
This.
There were a number of phases btwn slate/chalk and screens. I’d personally like to go back to pen/paper, text books, and physically present teachers who actually teach.
Textbooks are heavy, outdated and dumb. No need for them when we have the internet. Agility is a plus in education.
What’s the point of pen and paper in a digital age?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
This.
There were a number of phases btwn slate/chalk and screens. I’d personally like to go back to pen/paper, text books, and physically present teachers who actually teach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
Boy are you going to be surprised.
At what?
My kids grew up with screens in the classroom, one just graduated UVA Summa Cum Laude and has a professional services job in Manhattan where she is thriving (and working with screens, match). The other is a junior at Virginia Tech and also thriving. She is working toward a career in public health.
The kids will be ok.
Think how much smarter they’d be otherwise. You’d have a lawyer and doctor.
Anonymous wrote:And you are here on electronics or a laptop ranting on social media. It’s the curriculum, teaching style, lack of structure, etc in schools. Laptops are a tool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Naw. Screens are an integral part of our lives. They belong in schools.
Not going back to slate and chalk. Nope.
Boy are you going to be surprised.
At what?
My kids grew up with screens in the classroom, one just graduated UVA Summa Cum Laude and has a professional services job in Manhattan where she is thriving (and working with screens, match). The other is a junior at Virginia Tech and also thriving. She is working toward a career in public health.
The kids will be ok.