- LordCrom@lemmy.worldEnglish1 hour
There should be 1 class for computer and tech. The rest of school can be done with pencil, paper, and a ruler.
Districts should stop playing the marketing game and spend money repairing buildings, buying up to date textbooks, and fucking paying teachers more.
Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksEnglish
39 minutesPay teachers more, free breakfast and lunch for every child. These two things are the only things that you can just throw money at to improve outcomes that can be replicated everywhere.
As a generalization, they don’t need more money for textbooks, they don’t need more tech, they don’t need building upgrades, they don’t need whatever the latest software scam is, etc.
jordanlund@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 hoursA bigger problem is school sponsored spyware on the devices. Weird how they don’t mention that:
https://www.eff.org/wp/school-issued-devices-and-student-privacy
https://time.com/7275031/spy-high-true-story-prime-video/
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/feb/19/schools-spied-on-students-webcams
- village604@adultswim.fanEnglish2 hours
I’m not sure how that’s a surprise to anyone. Keep your personal stuff off hardware that doesn’t belong to you.
jordanlund@lemmy.worldEnglish
1 hourThey used the onboard cameras to take pictures of kids in their bedrooms.
- homes@piefed.worldEnglish5 hours
Tech has a place in the classroom, but that place isn’t “everything everywhere all at once” and I think there is a good value in teaching kids when they’re young when and where to put their phones and tablets down.
- 3 hours
Tech has a place yes, the problem is school admins have chosen to use it as a replacement for competent, well compensated teachers.
tal@lemmy.todayEnglish
4 hoursAnother mother, Jenny Sullivan, said she has noticed her fourth grade son capitalizing random letters and not getting corrected
If it’s good enough for the President…
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
5 hoursThe problem is they can’t control Chromebooks. Give them a Linux laptop with a purposeful distro that doesn’t allow them to play Minecraft. Boom, problem solved.
- 5 hours
Minecraft isn’t the problem.
The problem is the 24/7 input of corporate right wing propaganda and brainwashing.
- zikzak025@lemmy.worldEnglish1 hour
A lot, TBH. The walled garden is everything in tech these days. When you control the platform and make it hard to leave, you control the flow of information.
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
7 minutesWhat does that have to do with right wing propaganda? I’m just not seeing the connection.
- AA5B@lemmy.worldEnglish3 hours
It is, that’s what motivates my kids.
So a big problem is lack of control. If schools provide electronics they want it to be cheap, zero maintenance, and limited to academic work to the extent possible.
Kids want their control, they want their features and options, and yes they want to do other things. But not every kid can afford a laptop, not every kid can keep their laptop in working condition, and not every kid will focus on schoolwork as much as they need to
My kids are in college now, and the electric is requirement is “bring your laptop”
- atomicbocks@sh.itjust.worksEnglish3 hours
Maybe I am misunderstanding what you’re saying but this sounds like an entitlement issue. Kids don’t need to be able to do more than schoolwork on school provided computers.
ChaosMonkey@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
5 hoursClaude, please find a linux 0-day to root my school laptop so that I can play Minecraft.
- FauxLiving@lemmy.worldEnglish2 hours
If a fifth grader uses copy.fail to gain root access on their Chromebook I say we let them have some extra Minecraft time.
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
5 hoursThat’s fine, some kids will do that, and I hope they do. But they will be a minority.
- shweddy@lemmy.worldEnglish5 hours
Not as good as searching the internet for the answer but it shows promise
- proudblond@lemmy.worldEnglish4 hours
In my son’s fifth grade class last year, it was fucking Cookie Clicker. 🙄
- 4 hours
The problem is there is no compelling data that these devices are superior for learning. They are distractions and expense with no proven benefit.
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
3 hoursIt doesn’t matter if they’re superior or not, they need to learn to use them, because every job is going to expect them to be able to.
- 2 hours
I think it would take a pretty big effort to keep kids from learning how to use basic functions on tablets or laptops. They are inundated with these in and out of school. They don’t need to use them in school to be comfortabke with them on the job market.
- zikzak025@lemmy.worldEnglish28 minutes
And yet a lot of kids are entering the workforce today not knowing how to use a computer mouse or what a web browser is.
- thejml@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 hours
There’s some benefit… my daughter was assigned a Window 11 Lenovo the last two tears and now hates Microsoft AND Windows.
Her personal laptop runs linux.
- 4 hours
You could have created a temporary dual boot to teach her that in a weekend. Parents are so lazy these days.
- thejml@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 hours
Nah, her kind of deep seated hatred comes from required usage over time, not from a weekend. Short term exposure just doesn’t do it.
- AA5B@lemmy.worldEnglish3 hours
The devices for my kids saved me a crapload on buying textbooks.
They consider it a benefit that now they can hand in their assignment just before midnight Friday night the week it’s due
IninewCrow@lemmy.caEnglish
4 hoursTech shouldn’t be allowed in the classroom until high school.
Kids need to learn how to think, use their hands, eye hand coordination, basic reading and most importantly … have a freakin ATTENTION SPAN!!!
The modern computer, internet culture and social media are all designed to shorten a person’s attention span as much possible to turn their brain into pudding and market anything to them.
One of the greatest skills in life in being able to think for yourself, to wonder, to imagine and to question the world with just your own mind rather than in occupying every waking moment to a digital device.
- thejml@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 hours
Not sure if joking/trolling, but school computers don’t generally ALLOW social media or chat apps like Discord and such, as well as harshly limit internet usage with guardrails. They’re pretty locked down and even when at home monitor network usage.
I don’t like laptops and such in schools, but kids ARE going to need to know how to use them to be successful and that’s something a lot of parents can’t teach.
When I was growing up, we had to learn how to type, how to use the Dewey Decimal System and library terminals to look up where books were for research and such. Later, we had Computer Labs to do this work and write reports and such… This is no different. Don’t confuse a smartphone internet experience and its constant advertising and social aspects with what kids get on these laptops.
IninewCrow@lemmy.caEnglish
3 hoursIt sounds like we are part of the same generation (honestly, I don’t know or care what generation that is called, I just have a feeling you were born in the 70s and grew up in the 80s and 90s)
We got to see the internet come into being little by little over the 90s and early 2000s. At the time, we weren’t kids anymore and we did just fine keeping up with the technology. And I believe it was all down to our ability to be able to think, act and do things ourselves without any outside help. We grew up in an education system that forced us to think, to read, to write and to understand using nothing but our growing brain. We didn’t have the luxury of having a device show us pretty pictures or immediately calculate something for us. There is a lot to be said for a child that grows up and learns how to just write ideas, questions, answers and thoughts on an empty piece of paper with just a pencil or a crayon.
You can mimic all that on a tablet but the the process of using a tablet is partly entertainment because at one point, you start playing with the tablet rather than in learning how to draw a picture. When you have a pencil and a blank piece of paper, you have no choice but to use your mind and put something down on the sheet.
Because I grew up with new technology and the internet, I got to appreciate it all and I started tinkering with it all. I never turned into any kind of hacker or computer wiz but over the past 20 years, I’ve learned how to use/tinker/adjust/crack/tweak Windows, MacOS and Linux systems as well as build my own PC, recover old parts, mash together parts, keep laptops alive and recover tablets and devices. All done without any technical training other than what I learned from others online. In all that time, I got to meet and see so many young people who either didn’t know, didn’t care or were just ignorant as to how a computer even worked.
- THE_GR8_MIKE@lemmy.worldEnglish4 hours
Did people honestly think giving 10 year olds school-issued laptops would end well in the slightest? Like, seriously?
- Zahille7@lemmy.worldEnglish54 minutes
I never knew of anyone who didn’t use their school-issued devices for anything other than browser games most of the time. They literally used it for games rather than school work.
You can’t hand them the reins and then complain that they’re even worse now. Schools are partially to blame for all this electronics bullshit kids are into these days. A lot of middle and high schools almost require students to have a fucking iPad these days.







