- Joined
- Jan 30, 2008
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Consider this a mini-rant on behalf of me for myself, and by me for the schools.
Disclaimer: I am NOT a technophobe. I do web development, so I''m around technology all day. However, neither am I an uncritical bandwagon jumper. Technology must serve a real need with me, or I don''t adopt it. I don''t like spending the amount of money and time required to keep up with it, quite frankly. I''d rather spend that money on jewelry, or the tools and materials to make it myself. That said, I somewhat reluctantly use some of technology today. I have a Facebook page. I have a cell PHONE - meaning I CALL people on it. I do not text. I do not have web connectivity on my phone, and yet, due to the bandwidth chewing apps of the i-Phone, I am frequently unable to receive voice messages timely, with many of them delivered a day or more later, or not at all. And no matter how many times I tell people that I do not text - that I do not have a text plan and must pay for each text - they still text me. Irritating.
So, it occurred to me that these gadgets and social networking have gotten completely out of hand, and have not made people more connected or genuinely social. It struck me most forcefully one night after a sailboat race. I came out to socialize but my husband''s entire crew - all under 40, and most under 30 - were sitting around after the race, and not ONE of them was talking to each other or anyone else. They all had out their phones and were absorbed in them, oblivious to the world and people around them. I said, loud enough for all to hear, "Ah, a perfect example of the huge generational gulf right here: no one talking, all with heads up a phone." They finally looked up, then looked chagrined, and put them away.
Then I began to notice how many times a day I must dodge oblivious texters in my hallway at work, who can''t be bothered to even look up.
Then I read this article, Online Bullies Pull Schools Into the Fray - and my stupid meter just hit overload. I just want to take these parents and slap the snot out of them, quite honestly. I''m so utterly tired of hearing - from my husband and in the news - of parents who won''t be parents. "Oh schools, please save us because we''re too lazy or scared to do the hard work of monitoring our kids or denying our little darlings anything!! What, call the other parents?? OMG! We can''t do THAT, we interact with them socially! YOU do it, school." I think I''m going to vomit.
OK...rant over. Any thoughts? Am I just hopelessly old and crotchety to think that we''re actually LESS social and genuinely connected to real flesh and blood people, due to the explosion of "social" technology? (Of course the irony of my time spent on this very site is not lost on me either, although my online time has decreased rather a bunch lately - too busy with real life, and too sick of trying to convert old VB6 .dlls into .NET .dlls and then trying to get them to interopt with ancient classic APS pages using VBscript - yes that is an invitation to any of you techies out there to pipe up. Ghastly problem, and I''m under the gun to do it fast. Riiiight)
Disclaimer: I am NOT a technophobe. I do web development, so I''m around technology all day. However, neither am I an uncritical bandwagon jumper. Technology must serve a real need with me, or I don''t adopt it. I don''t like spending the amount of money and time required to keep up with it, quite frankly. I''d rather spend that money on jewelry, or the tools and materials to make it myself. That said, I somewhat reluctantly use some of technology today. I have a Facebook page. I have a cell PHONE - meaning I CALL people on it. I do not text. I do not have web connectivity on my phone, and yet, due to the bandwidth chewing apps of the i-Phone, I am frequently unable to receive voice messages timely, with many of them delivered a day or more later, or not at all. And no matter how many times I tell people that I do not text - that I do not have a text plan and must pay for each text - they still text me. Irritating.
So, it occurred to me that these gadgets and social networking have gotten completely out of hand, and have not made people more connected or genuinely social. It struck me most forcefully one night after a sailboat race. I came out to socialize but my husband''s entire crew - all under 40, and most under 30 - were sitting around after the race, and not ONE of them was talking to each other or anyone else. They all had out their phones and were absorbed in them, oblivious to the world and people around them. I said, loud enough for all to hear, "Ah, a perfect example of the huge generational gulf right here: no one talking, all with heads up a phone." They finally looked up, then looked chagrined, and put them away.

Then I began to notice how many times a day I must dodge oblivious texters in my hallway at work, who can''t be bothered to even look up.

Then I read this article, Online Bullies Pull Schools Into the Fray - and my stupid meter just hit overload. I just want to take these parents and slap the snot out of them, quite honestly. I''m so utterly tired of hearing - from my husband and in the news - of parents who won''t be parents. "Oh schools, please save us because we''re too lazy or scared to do the hard work of monitoring our kids or denying our little darlings anything!! What, call the other parents?? OMG! We can''t do THAT, we interact with them socially! YOU do it, school." I think I''m going to vomit.
OK...rant over. Any thoughts? Am I just hopelessly old and crotchety to think that we''re actually LESS social and genuinely connected to real flesh and blood people, due to the explosion of "social" technology? (Of course the irony of my time spent on this very site is not lost on me either, although my online time has decreased rather a bunch lately - too busy with real life, and too sick of trying to convert old VB6 .dlls into .NET .dlls and then trying to get them to interopt with ancient classic APS pages using VBscript - yes that is an invitation to any of you techies out there to pipe up. Ghastly problem, and I''m under the gun to do it fast. Riiiight)