Back In My Day, We Didn't Have These Young Whippersnappers With Their Facebooks And Their Googles
from the where's-my-sliderule? dept
It looks like Nick Carr is actually a bit late to the game in blaming the internet for making people dumb these days. Someone else is coming out with an entire book called The Dumbest Generation, which claims that today's kids are totally screwed up thanks to the internet. This book has received enthusiastic reviews from folks, such as a Chicago Sun Times columnist, trotting out the modern version of the "those young whippersnappers" lines. The evidence? The fact that kids use the internet more to communicate with others, rather than to suck at the teat of the established "authoritative" media.Romenesko, however, points us to a fantastic response from another reporter, Steve Rhodes, who points out how dumb it is to call this generation dumb thanks to the internet. In fact, he makes the point quite clear, by noting that the idea that the established media, such as the Chicago Sun Times, is somehow a bastion of intelligence is easily debunked:
And I'm not sure where a Sun-Times columnist gets off complaining that the Internet is dumbing down America while the paper is running a "Which Team's Fans Are Hotter?" contest.As for all that communication going on? That helps make people smarter:
I'm a Facebook fan. It's very powerful, and I've hardly begun to exploit all of its capabilities.... I feel smarter after spending time on Facebook; I feel dumber after reading the local newspapers....He then gets the other columnist to admit that he's never even seen Facebook, despite bashing it as being a terrible thing for kids to be using all the time.
I'm not trying to pick on Lazare - well, actually I am - but he's emblematic of a newspaper creature that is just beyond me. See, he didn't want to know what he was talking about. He just didn't want to know....So, again, just as with every generation, there will be a group of folks who complain that today is somehow worse, and "back in my day" things were somehow better. None of it's true. Things change, the world adapts -- and if you choose not to, things may seem worse, but it isn't in any real objective sense. But, in the meantime, for those folks who are scared of change and afraid of actually recognizing how the changing world is full of opportunities, it means there's an opportunity to sell silly books with provocative headlines. Moral outrage ahead! The kids are using Facebook rather than flipping baseball cards and throwing jacks!
But newspapers went off the rails at just the moment the Internet flourished as an even better place to do journalism and communicate with people. It should have been a glorious melding of the minds for a better, more creative and fun and civically inspired tomorrow, but all newspaper people could see was the threat, not the opportunity.
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Filed Under: dumbest generation, generation gap, internet, stupidity
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Things indeed change but
It is this new freedom from authority and the established way of doing things that seems threatening to people like this Nick Carr and to the old farts in Congress. They'd much rather be in control of everybody all the time.
Hopefully they won't get their wish!
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Re: Things indeed change but
Gad. New freedom, every generation.
--Glenn
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here, here
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Re: here, here
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damn kids these days...
These days the average person has immediate access to all kinds of information, but I suspect the majority lack the critical thinking skills to research beyond conclusions which reinforce what they already hold as true.
I do believe that we are raising a generation of sociopaths, and that scares the crap out of me. Toddlers should be playing with Lincoln Logs, not a "learning laptop." They should wait until they are at least 6 before they are force fed information.
Matt
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Re: damn kids these days...
And why 6 years? Cognitively, humans' brains are not fully developed - last development occurs in the frontal lobe, which is responsible for reasoning and logic - until about 21 years of age.
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Re: Re: damn kids these days...
I am most worried that being brought up from such a young age with such busy schedules will stifle a kid's ability to see the beauty in wholly non-productive pursuits. The message we are sending kids is that they need to Kaizen every process in their life. No wasted movements! Screw that. Sometimes my dog likes to roll around in the grass (not on dead earthworms), so I tried it with him. It was fun. No ends, just means.
I have no problem with technological advances. In fact, I love them. No modern-day Luddite here. Hell, I read Techdirt. If I hated technology I would just read regular dirt. But I prefer to call the pizza joint because I like interacting with people, and that also gives them a chance to suggest something I may otherwise not have tried.
As I stated, I do not think the internet is responsible for kids lacking logic and reasoning skills; I don't think those skills have been properly taught in school since before I started (late 70s). But while the internet has the ability to give us all the information we need to become smarter, it can not unless we use it properly. A kid who can't effectively research a topic in a library still can't effectively research a topic on the internet.
"There are now three ways to do things: the right way, the wrong, and the Max Power way."
"Isn't that just the wrong way?"
"Yes, only faster!"
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Forgot something
And Porn, don't forget porn.
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blaming the
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Re: blaming the Net
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i guess
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its happened before - remember generation X?
Interestingly enough they were also the generation of the Internet boom, and the 80hr work weeks in the name of stock options and the redefining of the corporate world.
It happens every decade with every generation. There was never a "greatest generation" There was and are just people who are forced to do things in the name of survival.
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Global
Today the borders that parents still try to create are brought down by the internet. Pen pals are on IM and chat in China, Germany, Korea, Vietnam and all other places the older generations are afraid of. Globalization happens at a young age and is not a topic taught while getting your 4th degree at age 67.
Not all is bad! I personally can't wait to see my kids grow up with their "new way of thinking" and see how the world changes.
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Re: Global
To be equally fair, racist though most of us boomers were a large number of us fought against it and, to one degree or another overcame our own learned racism.
Heck, a Pen Pal from 200 miles away was distant in the 50s because people didn't travel the way they do today.
In a couple of the "reviews" on Amazon it appears that the author of the book spends an inordinate amount of time setting up and explaining the research on his complaints about the Internet and comes to a couple of not so startling conclusions.
One. Parents don't spend enough time with their kids or include them in adult conversation as the get older.
That's simply another shot at the too too busy parent who would rather work than spend time with thier offspring. A common enough observation these days and, like all sweeping generalizations, true enough as far as it goes.
The other side of that is that these same parents indulge their children far too much to keep them out from under foot.
Two. These children, adolescents really, don't seek out sites on politics, law, economics and so on.
Newsflash! I didn't read newspaper articles on those subjects either until I got engaged by something or someone in those fields that got me drawn in. I still didn't go to newspapers for anything beyond the surface. Newspapers, outside of long columns on the subjects, are all about surface. Not detail.
Our horizons were small because our sources were small. Surprise, surprise!
So the world has changed in the last 20 years since the World Wide Web got invented and exploded onto the scene.
The kids get it. The writer of the book doesn't.
Show me a teenager from any era who would, voluntarily, seek out dry articles on economics and law, political science or any other number of esoteric and remote subjects.
There are, from their point of view, much more pressing things to do and deal with. Like growing up and becoming adults. (Even though they're never going to describe it that way any more than I did.)
The Web provides wide horizons. Other net services like IM or IRC offer the ability to "speak" to others who are distant beyond their parents belief and the precious opportunity to learn young that people are just people no matter where they come from.
We adults and old farts need to relearn some things too. How to relax, how to play and how to drop our dull monochrome views of ourselves and the universe.
ttfn
John
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that may be true, but...
Maybe we do not necessarily need those skills anymore though - or minimally need them. Since we have the technology to communicate via the internet or cell phones, maybe it's ok that some basic communication skills are lost. Overall, I think similar to the article, it may not be a good thing; however, it's certainly not bad...it's just different.
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Re: that may be true, but...
Otherwise, I think the internet is by far enhancing the relationships between people all over the world, and creating more ways for social connection. You "old timers" need to realize that not all socialization needs to be done face to face... and if so, then we've got some streaming video feeds on Skype, Yahoo, or whatever else for you if you HAVE to see the person you're speaking to.
Change with the times or get left behind.
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Re: that may be true, but...
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Re: that may be true, but...
I have noticed and I thank God for that, because there are few things I hate like people I don't know spouting their half-formed opinions at me and expecting me to agree, or at least smile and nod, because of small talk 'etiquette'.
Text messages and mp3 players didn't evolve in spite of all that wonderful small talk; it was at least partially because of it. It's the modern day newspaper-in-front-of-your-face-on-the-subway tactic. :) Hey! Yet another thing we don't need print media for! Take that, crappy hometown newspaper that tells me very little about my hometown!
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I'd buy the book, but only if it was on E-book, out of spite.
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Times change, but is it for the better?
What kids today need to learn is that you can't google life. You need to live it.
Snarl
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I'm an old guy who loves the web 2.0
Slang of any given generation, mine, yours or theirs, has never been approved by or generally understood by the older generations. That's the point. That's life. That's language development evolution and our children attempting to be different then those that came before them. All good things.
As for the internet being the bane of society, the same was said for TV, Radio and even the telegraph.
If we as humans failed to move forward developing and using newly developed communications mechanisms we all would never have even begun doing cave drawings or petroglyphs never would have been used, let alone the telephone or the written word.
Personally, I find it all exciting. I am full of anticipation to see what will be here 20 years from now, if I am still alive that is.....
This cat's headin' for splitsville man......
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I actually agree with Carr
I agree that there are many things on the internet that increase our knowledge, make us smarter, and all of that good jazz.
Most of the people reading this blog are mad at Carr, and responding hatefully to his facebook/google bashing, because a lot of us are considered "power-users". We use the internet for information, to improve it, to make it a better place; however, many of us simply ignore the fact that not everyone uses the internet like us.
Teenagers, and many individuals my age, only use the internet to check out the latest posts on their friends' facebook/myspace profiles, or checking out YouTube. They do nothing productive... These are the people who say "L-O-L" in real life (which urks me to all get out). Why do you have to say "L-O-L"? You say LOL online because it means that you are laughing out loud. I can't see or hear you, so I don't know if you're laughing. If you say LOL in real life and you're not laughing, you're negating everything the acronym stands for, and just look stupid. But I digress...
They are stupid and have no inter-personal skills that are essential to anyone NOT getting into the Tech industry. They don't know how to have a conversation outside of their IM/Social Networking programs and sites. They can't make eye-contact when engaging in conversation. They look around, and not directly at you, because face-to-face "confrontations", as it seems they feel it is, make them uncomfortable.
They also have TERRIBLE writing skills. I have people who send me professional e-mails with no punctuation, no capitalization, and a lot of acronyms that I have never seen in my life. Who needs grammar and spelling when you can simply slam your fist on the keyboard a half a dozen times, call it "internet speak" and click send?
The next time you're in public, try to talk to someone my age that you don't know. They will either completely ignore you, or act as shy as a toddler meeting someone for the first time, wishing their mother was there so they can hide their face in her leg.
It's truly embarrassing for me to see that.
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Re: I actually agree with Carr
The crappy unprofessional e-mails? Yeah, I get them. From people over the age of 25. I don't generally receive business e-mail from people under that age, but I'm sure they'd be the same and it has nothing to do with the Internet being available; it has to do with the ignorance of adults. They would use the same mispellings, poor grammer, and non-existant punctuation in a hand-written note. The social surfing? My 30-and-older co-workers check thier posts and replies just as much as the teenagers I know.
So it seems that the Internet symptoms are shared by young and old alike, and the social symptoms are non-existant in at least some areas of the United States.
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Re: Re: I actually agree with Carr
a) You don't pay attention
b)You use it yourself and are easily offended by someone else's opinion on the internet.
c) You're lying
d) You're in denial over how dumb our generation is (and the generation after us)
e) You don't have the internet where you live
If I don't see some teenage chick driving in her car, texting, putting on eye-liner, checking her e-mail on her PDA, and smoking a cigarette all at one time at least 5 times a day I'm in shock.
^ Those were for your first comment... It's everywhere. I've traveled this great country and encounter it from the most urban areas to the most rural.
Maybe e-mail is a bad example... I do, however, get what are supposed to be professional e-mails from people my age and younger. I'm a web developer for my college, and I look at resume's and cover letters that we get from applicants. Last time I checked there is no such thing as a "relaxed" or "informal" cover letter. Yet I've seen LOL's, I've seen grammar mistakes my 11 year old nephew wouldn't make... I've seen it all.
But you also realize that OUR generation is up to the age of 35-40 right now, right? 25-30 is our generation. If not, they would be 3-8 when they had us... not possible.
But I do get e-mails like that from older people, so that's why it might be a bad example...
But ALL writing, not just typing, is a bastardization of the English language.
Kids these days put too much trust in spell/grammar check... which is wrong about 80% of the time. They are DEPENDENT on it.
I will put my entire life savings on this following statement:
Within 2 generations... My children's children... Kids will still be walking through malls, but it will be deathly quiet inside. Instead of talking - they won't know how to any more - they'll be texting the person standing directly next to or in front of them. The only words they will mutter will be "You get text? I send text. Why you never do get none of my text?! I can haz cheezeberger?"
BTW.. I ownz all ur comment.
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Re: Re: Re: I actually agree with Carr
You could, but I could say the same of you. There's no way to prove that via the Internet.
b)You use it yourself and are easily offended by someone else's opinion on the internet.
Use what? Social networking sites? So what if I did? I'm not the one saying that there's something wrong with that. But you're welcome to Google my name and see if any MySpace or Facebook pages come up.
c) You're lying
Once again, you could be, also. No way to know.
d) You're in denial over how dumb our generation is (and the generation after us)
Once again, you could be in denial about how social kids are today. Or you could live in a quiet area... No way to know on the Internet.
e) You don't have the internet where you live
I guess that's possible because I'm submitting this comment with my Jedi mind powers.
But you also realize that OUR generation is up to the age of 35-40 right now, right? 25-30 is our generation. If not, they would be 3-8 when they had us... not possible.
What the hell does that mean? Does that mean that you're thirty-five to forty years old and you think I am also? If so, how are we also twenty-five to thirty years old? Huh? Three to eight what? Are you talking about our parents now?
Look, buddy, I'm twenty-two. My generation is composed of people who were born in between 1980 and 1989. Which makes the oldest of my generation twenty-eight years old and the youngest nineteen years old. So I'm not sure what that whole paragraph is supposed to mean...
What makes you think that your eleven year old relative wouldn't make the same mistakes as the people who are older and have received the same education? If your relative received a better education, then you've answered your own question about dumbness, and the answer was education, not technology.
Where do you get your spelling and grammar statistics from? Please cite your source. Hint: Funny cats don't make reliable sources. Although they are funny. And so are you, especially when you complain about Internet lingo, bad grammar, and horrific punctuation and then use all three liberally.
So I guess that means you're owned, instead? If so, you can have yourself back. I don't want you.
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Re: Re: I actually agree with Carr
They would use the same mispellings, poor grammer, and non-existant punctuation in a hand-written note. The social surfing? My 30-and-older co-workers check thier posts and replies just as much as the teenagers I know.
Exactly!That's speak, misspellings, grammar, existent, and their.
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Bah! I still have my K&E polyphase log-log duplex rule.
But it's not "internet speak" that
bugs me as much as receiving email
writen in text messaging shorthand.
Nick Carr... these googles, they do nothing!
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.....
Stuff costs more than it used to!!
My social security check is late!!!
Seriously, damn whipper snappers! I agree that many of the younger generation need a hell of a lot more common sense. But take it a step back to their parents. While its true that they want to do better by their kids then they were, they are screwing them up by spoiling them with every little thing they can buy them, and protecting them everything. Hell, kids can't go for a bike ride to their friends house with out wearing at least a dozen form of protective pads. Let them fall off their bikes and get road rash the way god intended it!!! This is how we learn.
And no, not every kid is a winner. Most suck at a lot of things and need to be told so. Instead of cottling them into growing up to be a mediocre dumb ass at his choice of careers, he should have been encouraged to do where and what he/she truly shows a gift for.
Guess what folks, I wanted to be a fighter pilot for the Marine Air Corps, but I ended up driving and commanding tanks, and later my gift at systems administration took over. so I became a successful network and systems admin.
Sometimes being what they want to be isn't the best choice for what they are truly meant to be in life.
No wonder today people marvel at mediocre actors, music that really sucks, and lame movies. A world of mediocrity exists where the press is so lame that they have to invent the news or report on some poor local shmuck that fell off his chair. Sites like MySpace and Facebook only prove my point. Not everyone should be taking pictures of themselves for the world to see. You never know what you might regret doing later in life.
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Who's the Dumbest?
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Jacks
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Not everything new is better ...
Sometimes it is true that new things are better. Sometimes it isn't true. Mike's last paragraph seems to take the position that everything new is better. I believe that is an overstatement.
I'm not making a statement about the worth of any of the new things under discussion here -- just that, in general, some new things are only fads and aren't really better than the old things. I agree that unthinking rejection of the new is not smart nor justified. But unthinking rejection of the old isn't smart, either.
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Re: Not everything new is better ...
I made no such statement. I'm merely pointing out that new things open up new opportunities. It's neither better nor worse.
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I've always been afraid of what is to come, and as a high school student I know the "average" student better than most of you. I've been told to simplify my work on politics and not go in depth with Chinese government because I'm "displaying to a year eight class". I was surprised in year 6 when people kept repeating the same adjectives and using three of the former to describe the same thing. Ex. "Gooey, warm, melting chocolate"
Also, I disagree with some of you. No matter I'm Australian, I actually spend quite a while on the computer playing games and I am within my optimum weight/height ratio, and I use "LOL" in everyday sentences, but yet you see me writing this piece. I complete all my work on time and get As and Bs.
I never use spell check, but I always use the computer to write. I can spell and punctuate, although my handwriting is a bit shaky because I have Dysgraphia. I also regularly take part in adult conversations.
What I'm trying to say is, didn't your generation have couch potatos and druggies who turned out on the lower side of society?
Surely there's an exception to every rule.
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