Skip to main content

Turkle & Wesch

In Turkle's article "The Flight From Conversation", she shares her perspective on the technological universe that we live in today. She discusses that in our current society, we have sacrificed conversation with each other for simple connection (in the form of our communicative technologies). Though we are all connected together through our cellphones, we are not interacting in the same ways we have in the past. This has left us in a 'Goldilocks' zone according to Turkle, in which we use our technology in order to not be too close and not too far from others. In this zone of disconnection, we can be left feeling alone, with our technologies acting as a crutch we use to fend off the feelings of loneliness while only continuing the problem. She ends her article with a quote that succinctly summarizes her stance on new technologies, "If we are unable to be alone, we are far more likely to be lonely".
Image result for technology monster In Wesch's article, "Anti-Teaching: Confronting the Crisis of Significance" he speaks about his experience with education and the concept he calls "Anti-Teaching". Wesch struggles with the idea of what teaching means versus what it has become. The education he compares anti-teaching to is one that I, and likely all of us, have experienced; large classrooms, neat rows and desks, and students asking "How long does this paper have to be?". Wesch argues that this form of teaching does not instill true learning that is significant to students, and simply teaches them how to pass arbitrary tests. In order to combat this, Wesch integrates as much connection into his classroom, both personally with his students and through technology. One of his projects involves students digitally creating a time-continuum of humanity that they show at the end of the semester. 

In regards to technology and connection in the classroom, I feel like these two authors are allies, in that they are both attempting to solve the issue of connection and significance in our society. While they are attempting to solve the same problem, they do not have the same viewpoint in regards to fixing this problem. Turkle argues that the solution to the problem is seemingly to avoid technology, removing it from spaces that should be technology free (certain rooms, offices or her trip to Cape Cod). On the other end of the debate, Wesch believes that we must learn to integrate these technologies in order to build connection. Rather than removing technology from his class, he has students embrace it and build connection through his projects or projecting screens onto the wall. Though drastically different solutions, both are working to build connection amongst our world and our students.

If I were to pick a side, I side with Wesch in this debate. Technology is not going to go anywhere, and metaphorically crawling under a rock (or Thoreau-ing it up in Cape Cod) will not teach our students how to use technology in a healthy way. In many debates, one side is often attempting to uphold the status quo, or the way things used to be. If we do not move forward and upset status quo, our society will stagnate. I think that if we were to think of ways to critically integrate technology into our lives in unique and meaningful ways, we can keep our classrooms and world progressively moving forward.

Image result for technology monster

Comments

  1. I like that you point out technology is not going to go anywhere, and metaphorically crawling under a rock (or Thoreau-ing it up in Cape Cod) will not teach our students how to use technology in a healthy way. As we learned in Boyd's article, that responsibility lies on today's teachers.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love how you focused on her statement about being lonely. It is something I am very conscious of and working on as a model for my kids. I want them to be able to be alone! (especially so I can cook/clean etc...)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you for taking the time to explain their differences in what either believes is the "solution" to the issue of connection! I agree that both Wesch and Turkle are allies, but what they propose is different. And I agree with you that of the two, Wesch seems more applicable/reasonable... while I do think taking a technology break is never a bad thing, to place such emphasis on it as to create whole spaces for it within existing structures, making it mandatory, is a bit much.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I loved your comment on how technology is not going anywhere. I actually just think that technology is finding new and better ways to integrate itself into our lives-- whether we like it or not. It makes me wonder what technology's role in our lives will be years from now and how it will impact our niches in the world... Hm.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Digital Native or Not?

I was born prior to most of the modern day technology youth have access to today. Although I was not born into this technology, my early childhood years saw the transition into today's modern technologies. Due to this, I think of myself more as a digital native than a digital immigrant. Though I was born in a time when cellphones and laptops were not quite as ubiquitous  as they are today, I spent most of my time with the forms of technology that were available to me. As a 6 or 7 year old, I would play Nintendo 64 or Playstation or Gameboy, which were new and advanced for the time. By the time I was in middle school, I was spending a lot of time on the desktop computer, on websites such as Myspace (shoutout to Tom !). I developed the 'native' skills of twitch speed or parallel processing while going down Wikipedia rabbit holes while playing flash games in another tab.

danah boyd vs Prensky - Digital Nativism

Are today's youth digital natives? In the debate of digital nativism between boyd and Prensky, I wholeheartedly agree with boyd's perspective. Digital nativism is the idea some generations are digital natives, meaning they naturally adept at navigating and understanding digital technologies and systems. On the other hand, the existence of a digital native implies the idea of digital immigrants, or those who are foreign to the digital familiarity experienced by natives. In chapter 7 of danah boyd's It's Complicated , she discusses the idea of digital nativism and how it is actually dangerous mindset to have. To start, boyd discusses that the idea of nativism vs immigrant truthfully stems from the fear created by generational gaps which are increasingly illustrated through technology use. She paraphrases Barlow when she discusses that, "the implicit fear that stems from the generational gap that has emerged around technology." The idea of generational tensi...

Assignment B - Taking it All Home!

This week's reading was theTeaching Tolerance article  Teaching at the Intersections  by Monita K. Bell. In this article, the idea of 'intersectionality' is discussed, and what that means for educators and our students. Various student experiences are discussed throughout the article as a way to make sense of the idea of intersectionality. In my experience, intersectionality has been framed as the threat of discrimination due to one or multiple of your identity markers. In this way, a student in the article, named G.G., is used as an example of the ways in which multiple markers can disadvantage someone beyond just one of their identity markers. Being black and female and queer presents the potential  for increased instances of discrimination due to one, multiple, or all of those markers. In order to be effective educators, we must view our students " through an  intersectional  lens: recognizing that race-, gender-  and  class-related circumstances a...