After a crazy year of college and various other pursuits, I return yet again to make another post on my webblog. I am always curious as to why I always return to blogging after extended periods of inactivity. My best guess is that I love to write and that I love to stimulate the minds of all who come across my path. And so, for my grand return, I present the following essay (nearly fifteen pages in length) that I wrote for one of my Humanities courses at Grove City College. This research paper details how the overuse of computers for educational uses in today's classrooms has proven to be detrimental to American schooling. I hope that you will read this paper and respond with your views on the topic. I include a bibliography for the reader to validate sources or to explore for further reading. Without further ado, I publish:
uninstalling the way to a better education:
how extensive computer use in school has proved to be detrimental to american schooling
“Pupils may have a favorite teacher, they will never have a favorite computer.”
~Leonard A. Muller
Schooling For More Than Economic Purposes
Making computers a focal point in schools implies that the purpose of schooling is about the transfer of information for the goal of producing persons able to work in the industrial world. Proponents of large-scale computer use in schools claim that computers ought to be a focal point of instruction because of their prevalence in the “real-world,” especially in today’s workplaces. Concerning the importance of moving American schools into the Information Age, former IBM CEO Louis Gerstner, Jr. claims “we need to recognize that our public schools are low-tech institutions in a high-tech society.”[2] As such, if students are to succeed in their future occupations, then they must develop marketable computer skills. As stated in the 1983 government report A Nation at Risk, “Learning is the indispensable investment required for success in the ‘information age’ we are entering;” but their motive: “If only to keep and improve on the slim competitive edge we still retain in world markets.”[3] Clearly, this emphasis on the development of profitable skills demonstrates a narrow purpose of schooling, focused primarily on job training. Postman, decrying the current trend of increased use of computers in schooling, asks, “What do we believe education is for? The answers are discouraging, and one of them can be inferred from any television commercial urging the young lady to stay in school. The commercial will either imply or state explicitly that education will help the persevering student to get a good job. And that’s it.”[4] In short, the emphasis on developing marketable skills in students has made the purpose of school only the production of workers for the sake of a healthy economy.
By making schooling about the creation of technicians, large-scale computer use challenges the concept of schooling that focuses on the development of the whole person. Author Jacques Ellul, writing about the dangers of a school system so focused on industry, says “The new pedagogical methods correspond exactly to the role assigned to education in modern technical society….According to this conception, education no longer has a humanist end or any value in itself; it has only one goal, to create technicians.”[5] This “role assigned to education” is the production of pupils able to run the machines of the future, namely computers. According to Ellul, modern technical society has rejected the traditional idea of schooling of developing and molding the whole person–mind, body, and soul–and not merely the résumé. Referencing scientist Louis Couffignal, Ellul laments that for the new technical-driven school, “the human brain must be made to conform to the much more advanced brain of the machine. And education will no longer be an unpredictable and exciting adventure in human enlightenment, but an exercise in conformity and an apprenticeship to whatever gadgetry is useful in the technical world.”[6] Truly, the Information Age in schooling, with its emphasis on manufacturing students with money-making skills in the form of computer training, has ignored a student’s emotional, moral, spiritual, and overall intellectual development, and has instead proclaimed that “money is the principle thing; culture, art, spirit, morality are jokes and are not to be taken seriously.”[7] According to contemporary school reformers, since moral, spiritual, emotional, and social skills do not turn a profit, there is no need to teach these uneconomic skills; what matters is that computers make money, so students must learn how to use computers effectively if they, too, are to make money. Clearly, the emphasis of computer use opposes the traditional view of schooling that aims to teach civic and moral responsibility.
By endorsing a primarily economic purpose to schooling, large-scale computer use cripples the age-old schooling purpose of teaching students to become complete citizens and humans. In fact, school administrators believe so fervently in the computer’s ability to deliver such grand economic progress that they have willingly sacrificed various other school and cultural functions such as having smaller class sizes, renovating decaying buildings, providing arts programs in elementary schools as well as offering full-day preschool and kindergarten in order to make room for expensive computer technology.[8] Indeed, the computer craze in schools has caused many schools and classrooms to abandon the original purposes of school: that of creating a civilized and responsible person. Author Larry Cuban adds, “Popular as it has been among parents and policymakers, this economic justification for schooling…has overwhelmed the civic and moral purposes for schooling children and youth that dominated throughout most of
Teacher-Centered, Not Object-Centered, Schooling
One of the most important consequences of large-scale computer use in American schools has been its attempt to displace the teacher from the center of classroom activities. According to proponents of widespread computer use in schools, “The student assumes a central role as the active architect of his or her own knowledge and skills, rather than passively absorbing information proffered by the teacher.”[13] In fact, the student is not merely an architect, but a “technonaut,” actively seeking out answers in the infinite glory that is the Internet, just as an astronaut discovers information about the universe.[14] The overall effect is that the computer dislodges teachers from the center of classroom instruction, forcing them to take different roles in schooling. These new roles include coach, facilitator, and mentor – virtually anything than mere “conduits of factual information readily available from other sources.”[15] In fact, some supporters of extensive computer use believe that computers will eventually make teaching a virtually nonexistent profession by enabling a few “star teachers” to work nationally in educating every American student.[16] Evidently, the traditional idea of the teacher-centered classroom is invalid and the way of the future is to enable computers to individualize student learning and to assist students in discovering their own truth. However, computers, unable to execute the complex tasks already performed by teachers, are completely inadequate in replacing teachers at the center of instruction.
Waving the banner of student-centered learning, advocates of large-scale computer use in schools have wrongly displaced teachers from the center of the classroom and have replaced them with machines incapable of providing an adequate education to its students. Rightly defined, one ought not to call computer-based instruction “student-centered schooling”, but computer- or “object-based schooling,” since it is not the student who is at the center of the instruction, but the computer, a mere object. One problem with object-centered schooling is that both computer and student are ignorant of what the student needs to learn. For example, while it is obvious that students do not enter school knowing that he requires understanding of the major concepts of Geometry and English Literature, the computer, too, has no way of truly knowing what students need to learn. The computer does not teach to the needs of the individual student because industries outside of education have largely been responsible for determining the content of educational computer programs.[17] In short, people who have spent little time teaching students in a classroom are the ones making decisions about what students ought to know, not teachers. This is precisely the reason many teachers refuse to endorse object-based instruction.
Since computers offer no way of tailoring quality instruction to individual students, teachers have largely given up on object-centered instruction and have returned to the teacher-centered instruction model. Teachers have been increasingly open to “low technologies” (chalkboards, textbooks, etc.) because they allow the teacher, not the computer, to control the learning. With a computer, the teacher, who knows the student intellectually and extra-intellectually (socially, morally, etc.), has no control over the content or presentation of the classroom material.[18] In fact, teachers have been more likely to adopt “low technologies” because they have been “simple, durable, flexible, and responsive to teacher-defined problems in meeting the demands of daily instruction.”[19] Diagnostic tests that “individualize” student learning simply do not compare to the attention a teacher offers everyday in the teacher-centered classroom. Take writing composition for example. A teacher is much better equipped to help a student write better composition than a computer. Author Wendell Berry writes “But a computer, I am told, offers a kind of help you can’t get from other humans; a computer will help you write faster, easier and more,” but counters “Do I, then, want to writer faster, easier, and more? No. My standards are not speed, ease and quantity…I would like to be a better writer, and for that I need help from other humans, not a machine.”[20] Not only do teachers offer better quality instruction intellectually, but they also are more able to teach the whole student, rather than only his intelligence.
Simply because teachers are human and not mere machines, they are more able to handle the complex needs of the student. If schooling is to become about the development of not only technical skills but also of developing the complex moral and civic responsibilities of the student, then humans (in the form of teachers), not computers, are clearly the only ones capable of adequately performing this important function. Discussing the complex role of the teacher in the classroom, Cuban writes,
Teachers at all levels have to manage groups in a classroom while creating individual personal relationships; they have to cover academic content while cultivating depth of understanding in each student; they have to socialize students to abide by certain community values, while nurturing creative and independent thought. These complex classroom tasks, unlike anything software developers, policymakers and administrators have to face, require careful expenditure of a teacher’s time and energy.[21]
Plainly, computers do not have the capacity to perform such complex tasks. Computers are machines; they do not possess the ability to have compassion for a student’s overall development as a human being nor do they have the power to reflect the community’s values that the student ought to imitate. Thus, by shifting the computer to center stage in today’s classrooms (and demoting the teacher in the process), supporters of computer-based learning devalue schooling.
Off The
By ousting the teacher from the center of classroom learning, the computer also endorses an isolated view of learning whereby students interact with a computer to learn rather than with both teacher and classmates. Large-scale computer use in the classroom attempts to create an individualized learning experience for the student where the student navigates and creates his own learning “rather than passively absorbing information proffered by the teacher.”[22] Large-scale computer use, then, creates a situation that places students at individual computer stations interacting with a computer and completing assignments given by the teacher.
A problem with this situation (aside from the obvious classroom management issues that will ensue) is that students are not able to practice and develop the social skills required to be a civilized human being while they are interacting individually with a computer. Computer programmer and author Clifford Stoll begs the question: “Just why is electronic interactivity good for scholarship? With a computer, you’re interacting with something, not someone…Come to think of it, aren’t teachers interactive? It’s hard to think of a classroom without interaction.”[23] Computer use, by eliminating the traditional teacher-centered classroom, has retarded the development of oral and social skills best taught orally by the teacher. According to Postman, “Orality stresses group learning, cooperation, and a sense of social responsibility,”[24] all important characteristics of a refined individual. As proponents of widespread educational computer use push the teacher out of the center of the classroom, it becomes clear that the individualized instruction offered by computers only depersonalizes our students.
Large-scale computer use in schools adds to the depersonalization of an already depersonalized society. According to former Hewitt Packard chairman and president Lewis E. Platt, “Technology has made our society a little less personal, and this trend will only increase as more and more interactions move into the electronic world,” and laments, “But as the Internet becomes more pervasive…it runs the risk of making our world worse, instead of better.”[25] In fact, Stoll believes that computers and the Internet have already made our world worse. First, psychologists have discovered that Internet use has caused an increase in depression by about one percent for every hour spent online per-week.[26] This is important to note because the additive nature of computer usage often removes its users, including students, from more communal activities.[27] Second, even if only for economic reasons, Stoll claims that employers today hardly ever dismiss their employees for insufficient computer skills but for their inadequate social skills, where Stoll blames the computer which “dulls those essential abilities.”[28] Third, object-based schooling robs teachers of the joy of teaching students. Stoll remarks, “I’ll bet the best teachers are in it for the feedback: the smile on the kid’s face and the ‘Aha’ from the chemistry student. These, of course, are the very things that technology removes.”[29] Extensive computer use in schools only exacerbates the depersonalization problem of our Internet-savvy society while refusing teachers the ability to instruct students how to become complete persons.
Producing students less able to deal socially with others is to fail to produce complete, well-rounded citizens. The best way to produce socially inept students is to give them each a computer, re-label students “technonauts,”[30] and allow them to learn in their own individual way. Postman, describing the greater purpose of the teacher-centered classroom, says,
This is why it won’t do for children to learn in ‘settings of their own choosing.’ That is also why schools require children to be in a certain place at a certain time and follow certain rules, like raising their hands when they wish to speak, not talking when others are talking, not chewing gum, not leaving until the bell rings, exhibiting patience towards slower learners, etc. This process is called making civilized people.[31]
The very nature of the teacher-centered classroom where the teacher instructs a classroom-full of students at once promotes sociability among students. It is only then that schooling can attempt “to tame the ego, to connect the individual to others, [and] to demonstrate the value and necessity of group cohesion.”[32] If schooling is to be about more than the development of marketable computer skills, then schools must restore the gregarious facet of education by uninstalling computers in the classroom and reinstalling teachers at the center of instruction.
Learning Is Not Always Fun, Easy, or Efficient
By delivering lightning-quick results with flashy graphics to watered-down questions, large-scale computer use endorses the idea that learning ought to always be fun, fast, and easy. One of the primary reasons computers are so prevalent in today’s society is that they are tools that more efficiently and more easily accomplish tasks than if one were to complete an identical task without a computer. Moreover, as the quantity and type of features within computer programs increases, one is often more and more amazed at the wonder of the modern computer. Computers are fun; one often uses computers not only for productivity purposes, but as an entertainment source as well. They provide users with information in the blink of an eye and the dancing colors on the screen are certainly pleasing to the senses. Since the computer inherently operates on the principles of ease, speed, and excitement, it is easy to observe how students using a computer in school to complete an academic assignment would expect the learning to be easy, fast, and fun.
However, learning is not, and has never been, always about making learning easier, more efficient, and more enjoyable. According to Stoll, the problem with computer use in the classroom is that computers offer “shortcuts to higher grades and painless learning.”[33] The recent trend of prevalent computer use in schools has caused students to recognize that learning should always be easy, fun, and efficient but never challenging, dull, nor requiring perseverance. But Stoll argues, “Most learning isn’t fun. Learning takes work. Discipline. Commitment both from teacher and student. Responsibility – you have to do your homework. There’s no shortcut to a quality education.”[34] Truly, if students are to become capable citizens, there exist topics that simply require hard work and determination, like spelling, reading, and multiplication. Stoll adds, “Sad to say, learning to multiply isn’t a feel-good project…Rather, learning the times tables requires rote drill work. It’s not fun, like shooting down Martians on a computer screen. But it’s one of those must-learn-or-else lessons, without which you’re eliminated from many fields of the human endeavor.”[35] In addition, the rewards of performing well on a computer-based program are often given in material terms: a fancy graphic appears on the screen congratulating the student, an A grade from the teacher, 15-minutes of “game-time” on the computer. However, if students are ever to become truly motivated to learn in and out of school (which ought to be a goal among educators), then teachers must help students realize that the benefits of learning are not for “an adrenaline rush, but a deep satisfaction arriving weeks, months, or years later.”[36] This may not be something teachers will be able to achieve in the short time they have with their students, but basing classroom instruction on computers will certainly make students less dependant on extrinsic motivators and potentially, in the future, more willing to accept the challenge to learn without incessantly falling into the temptations of ease, speed, and entertainment.
Quality, Not Quantity, Of Information
Since computers are non-discriminatory in the ways in which they disseminate information, and hence focus on the quantity, not quality, of information, large-scale computer use in schools makes students solely in charge of differentiating valuable information from insignificant information. According to promoters of educational computer use, a computer is “One of the most important teaching tools ever developed,” in that it possesses “the potential of bringing the entire body of world knowledge into the classroom in a variety of formats at the touch of a button.”[37] There is no doubt that Internet-ready computers have the ability to access a virtually infinite amount of information. However, one must consider if transporting the whole universe of information to a student’s computer portal is a valid aim. Obviously, if students are to learn about a given topic, they ought to learn the best things about that topic, not merely more things about the topic. A student possessing massive amounts of information about a given subject may be able to impress others on a quiz show, but he may completely miss the pieces of information that make it important to his education. For example, a student may be able to explain multiple facts about the family (say, that it provides food and shelter and that it traditionally consists of a husband and wife and their children) but completely miss the essential fact that a family is also a source of love, comfort, and support. In addition, widespread computer use in schools requires students overwhelmed with information to perform the role already carried out by teachers and curriculum, that of “organizing, limiting, and discriminating among available sources of information.”[38] This is a dangerous task to appoint to the ignorant student equipped with an Internet-ready computer because there is no way to ensure the student will discriminate correctly; that is, it is impossible to predict if the student will choose the best information that will enable him to develop into a complete person. The information-focused curriculum advocated by supporters of widespread computer use in schooling has the definite potential to create humans incapable of distinguishing between important and trivial (or even harmful) information.
Despite claims from computer advocates that extensive computer use in schools enhances a student’s ability to think critically and develop greater problem-solving skills, computer use actually discourages higher-level thinking. Advocates of large-scale computer use argue that by removing the teacher from the center of instruction, students are now, with the assistance of a handy computer, able to develop better problem-solving strategies and higher-order thinking skills.[39] However, according to Postman, computer-based schooling “vaults information-access [skills] to the top.”[40] Rather than develop higher-order thinking skills in students, a computer entertains students, and its use further encourages the trivialization of knowledge and understanding. Stoll argues, “These teaching machines direct students away from reading, away from writing, away from scholarship. They dull questioning minds with graphical games where quick answers take the place of understanding, and the trivial is promoted as educational.”[41] Computer use does not promote the practice of the sustained thought so integral to the performance of higher-order thinking. Echoing these words, Stoll challenges extensive computer use proponents to “Show [him] a computer program that encourages quiet reflection.”[42] Indeed, it would be very difficult (if not impossible) to find such a computer program because sustained thought is not fun, not easy, nor is it efficient. Since computers discourage the development of higher-order thinking skills and instead place the improvement of information-access skills at the pinnacle of learning, large-scale computer use proves to be detrimental to schooling.
Back to Basics
By endorsing a purely economic philosophy of schooling, removing the teacher from the center of instruction, isolating students in learning, striving to make learning fun, easy, and efficient, and overwhelming students with immeasurable amounts of indiscriminate information, the widespread use of computers in schools is harmful to American schooling. While there are certainly means by which skilled teachers can periodically utilize computers for worthy purposes, replacing teachers with computers as the focus of instruction damages a school’s ability to produce whole people – mature intellectually, socially, morally, and spiritually. Large-scale computer use has the same detrimental effects in Christian schools as well. The purpose of Christian education is “the transformation of the person. This goal is not limited to either the cognitive, the affective, or the volitional, but encompasses all three – knowing, feeling, and doing.”[43] Allowing computers – which endorse anti-intellectuality, immediate gratification, and shortcuts to easy grades and also inhibit the teacher’s ability to disciple students in spiritual matters – to dominate instruction is a sure way to guarantee the failure of Christian schools in achieving this purpose. Additionally, even if the sole purpose of computer use in schools were to increase student achievement and learning, there still exists “no solid proof computers boost students’ learning.”[44] Extensive computer use in schools has not only damaged our schools’ ability to produce complete humans able to make educated, thoughtful evaluations about every realm of life, but they have even failed to deliver on its most basic promise: that of improving student learning. Schools, once a place where students learned from teachers in large-group settings about what it means to be a complete citizen and human being, have since become institutions which exist to develop in students an array of technical and information-access skills while abandoning the essential practices of gregariousness, sustained thought, and finding a purpose for education beyond the thickness of one’s wallet. Only by uninstalling computers from the core of instruction and restoring the teacher as the leader of the classroom can schools ever hope to begin cultivating whole individuals; otherwise, schools will continue to reduce students to mere cogs that exist purely for the benefit of the Economy.
Bibliography
Barker, Bruce O. "The Internet Can Improve Education." In The Internet: Opposing Viewpoints, edited by Helen Cothran, 86.
Berry, Wendell. “Feminism, the Body, and the Machine.” In Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry, edited by Norman Wirzba, 65-80.
Cuban, Larry. Oversold and Underuse: Computers in the Classroom.
Ellul, Jacques. The Technological Society. Translated by John Wilkinson.
Gannett,
Kent, Todd W., and Robert F. McNergney. Will Technology Really Change Education? From Blackboard to Web.
Kushner, David. "The Internet Has Not Improved Education." In The Internet: Opposing Viewpoints, edited by Helen Cothran, 91.
Postman, Neil. Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology.
–. “Virtual Students, Digital Classroom.” In Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Educational Issues, 10th ed., edited by James W. Noll, 329-335.
Snider, James H. “Education Wars: The
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[1] Neil Postman, Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology (New York: Vintage Books, 1993), 184-185.
[2] Larry Cuban, Oversold and Underused: Computers in the Classroom (
[3] Cuban, op. cit., 4-7.
[4] Op. cit., 174.
[5] Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society, trans. John Wilkinson (New York: Vintage Books, 1964), 348.
[6] Ibid, 349.
[7] Ibid, 221.
[8] Cuban, op. cit., 193.
[9] Ibid, 7.
[10] Ibid, 8.
[11] Postman, op. cit., 174.
[12] Postman, op. cit., 185-186.
[13] Todd W. Kent and Robert F. McNergney, Will Technology Really Change Education? From Blackboard to Web (Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press, 1999), 5.
[14] Bruce O. Barker, "The Internet Can Improve Education," in The Internet: Opposing Worldviews, ed. Helen Cothran (
[15] Encyclopedia of American Education, 2nd ed. (
[16] James H. Snider, “Education Wars: The
[17] Kent and McNergney, op. cit., 30.
[18] Kent and McNergney, op. cit., 27.
[19] Ibid, 28-29.
[20] Wendell Berry, “Feminism, the Body, and the Machine” in Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry, ed. Norman Wirzba (
[21] Cuban, op. cit., 167-168.
[22] Kent and McNergney, op. cit., 5.
[23] Clifford Stoll, High-Tech Heretic: Reflections of a Computer Contrarian (New York: Anchor Books, 1999), 21.
[24] Op. cit., 17.
[25] Kent and McNergney, op. cit., 56.
[26] Stoll, op. cit., 199.
[27] Ibid, 146.
[28] Ibid, 122.
[29] Stoll, op. cit., 20.
[30] Bruce O. Barker, "The Internet Can Improve Education," in The Internet: Opposing Viewpoints” ed. Helen Cothran (
[31] Neil Postman, “Virtual Students, Digital Classroom” in Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Educational Issues, 10th ed., ed. James W. Noll (Guilford, Connecticut: Dushkin/McGraw-Hill, 1999), 334.
[32] Ibid, 333.
[33] Op. cit., 11.
[34] Ibid, 12.
[35] Stoll, op. cit., 76.
[36] Ibid, 12.
[37] Encyclopedia of American Education, op. cit., s.v. “computers.”
[38] Postman, Technopoly, op. cit., 62.
[39] Kent and McNergney, op. cit., 5.
[40] Postman, “Virtual Students, Digital Classroom”, op.cit., 332.
[41] Stoll, op. cit., 13.
[42] Ibid, 67.
[43] Lynn Gannett, “Teaching for Learning” in Christian Education: Foundations for the Future, ed. Robert E. Clark, Lin Johnson, and Allyn K. Sloat (Chicago: Moody Press, 1991), 114.
[44] David Kushner, "The Internet Has Not Improved Education," in The Internet: Opposing Viewpoints”, ed. Helen Cothran (