The article cites that low income families waste more time than families with a higher income, but when you look at the comparison, low income families spend=11.5 hrs/day and higher income families=10 hours/day.
Aren't both of those numbers too high? What is this article trying to prove? Be sure to fully answer the questions in your post and respond to a classmates' response by 3 p.m. on Tuesday. Happy posting!
May 29, 2012
Wasting Time Is New Divide in Digital Era
By MATT RICHTEL In the 1990s, the term “digital divide” emerged to describe technology’s haves and have-nots. It inspired many efforts to get the latest computing tools into the hands of all Americans, particularly low-income families.
Those efforts have indeed shrunk the divide. But they have created an unintended side effect, one that is surprising and troubling to researchers and policy makers and that the government now wants to fix.
As access to devices has spread, children in poorer families are spending considerably more time than children from more well-off families using their television and gadgets to watch shows and videos, play games and connect on social networking sites, studies show.
This growing time-wasting gap, policy makers and researchers say, is more a reflection of the ability of parents to monitor and limit how children use technology than of access to it.
“I’m not antitechnology at home, but it’s not a savior,” said Laura Robell, the principal at Elmhurst Community Prep, a public middle school in East Oakland, Calif., who has long doubted the value of putting a computer in every home without proper oversight.
“So often we have parents come up to us and say, ‘I have no idea how to monitor Facebook,’ ” she said.
The new divide is such a cause of concern for the Federal Communications Commission that it is considering a proposal to spend $200 million to create a digital literacy corps. This group of hundreds, even thousands, of trainers would fan out to schools and libraries to teach productive uses of computers for parents, students and job seekers.
Separately, the commission will help send digital literacy trainers this fall to organizations like the Boys and Girls Club, the League of United Latin American Citizens, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Some of the financial support for this program, part of a broader initiative called Connect2Compete, comes from private companies like Best Buy and Microsoft.
These efforts complement a handful of private and state projects aimed at paying for digital trainers to teach everything from basic keyboard use and word processing to how to apply for jobs online or use filters to block children from seeing online pornography.
“Digital literacy is so important,” said Julius Genachowski, chairman of the commission, adding that bridging the digital divide now also means “giving parents and students the tools and know- how to use technology for education and job-skills training.”
F.C.C. officials and other policy makers say they still want to get computing devices into the hands of every American. That gaps remains wide — according to the commission, about 65 percent of all Americans have broadband access at home, but that figure is 40 percent in households with less than $20,000 in annual income. Half of all Hispanics and 41 percent of African-American homes lack broadband.
But “access is not a panacea,” said Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft. “Not only does it not solve problems, it mirrors and magnifies existing problems we’ve been ignoring.”
Like other researchers and policy makers, Ms. Boyd said the initial push to close the digital divide did not anticipate how computers would be used for entertainment.
“We failed to account for this ahead of the curve,” she said.
A study published in 2010 by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that children and teenagers whose parents do not have a college degree spent 90 minutes more per day exposed to media than children from higher socioeconomic families. In 1999, the difference was just 16 minutes.
The study found that children of parents who do not have a college degree spend 11.5 hours each day exposed to media from a variety of sources, including television, computer and other gadgets. That is an increase of 4 hours and 40 minutes per day since 1999.
Children of more educated parents, generally understood as a proxy for higher socioeconomic status, also largely use their devices for entertainment. In families in which a parent has a college education or an advanced degree, Kaiser found, children use 10 hours of multimedia a day, a 3.5- hour jump since 1999. (Kaiser double counts time spent multitasking. If a child spends an hour simultaneously watching TV and surfing the Internet, the researchers counted two hours.)
“Despite the educational potential of computers, the reality is that their use for education or meaningful content creation is minuscule compared to their use for pure entertainment,” said Vicky Rideout, author of the decade-long Kaiser study. “Instead of closing the achievement gap, they’re widening the time-wasting gap.”
Policy makers and researchers say the challenges are heightened for parents and children with fewer resources — the very people who were supposed to be helped by closing the digital divide.
The concerns are brought to life in families like those of Markiy Cook, a thoughtful 12-year-old in Oakland who loves technology.
At home, where money is tight, his family has two laptops, an Xbox 360 and a Nintendo Wii, and he has his own phone. He uses them mostly for Facebook, YouTube, texting and playing games.
He particularly likes playing them on the weekends.
“I stay up all night, until like 7 in the morning,” he said, laughing sheepishly. “It’s why I’m so tired on Monday.”
His grades are suffering. His grade-point average is barely over 1.0, putting him at the bottom of his class. He wants to be a biologist when he grows up, he said.
Markiy attends Elmhurst Community Prep, located in a rough area (the school has a tribute hanging in its hallway to a 15-year-old girl recently stabbed to death by the father of her baby). Thirty-five percent of the students, like Markiy, are black, and most of the rest are Hispanic.
Alejandro Zamora, 13, an eighth grader, calls himself “a Facebook freak.” His mother, Olivia Montesdeoca, said she liked the idea of him using the computer (until it recently broke) but did not have much luck getting him to use it for homework.
“He’d have a fit. He’d have a tantrum,” she said, adding that she really did not understand some of what he did online. “I have no idea about YouTube. I’ve never even heard of a webcam.”
Ms. Robell, the principal, said children needed to know how to use technology to compete, but her priorities for her students were more basic: “Breakfast, lunch and dinner.”
Many lower-income families take great pains to manage how their children use their devices.
In Boston, Amy and Randolph Ross, neither of them a college graduate — she works in a hospital and he at a bookstore — recently bought their twin 15-year-old girls laptop computers as a reward for good grades. The parents make sure the computers are used mostly for homework or for the girls to explore their interest as budding musicians.
“If you just buy the computer and don’t guide them on the computer, of course it’s going to be misused,” Ms. Ross said.
Her mother-in-law, Edna Ross, the matriarch of their African-American family who lives nearby in
Dorchester, Mass., feels the same way. She got a new Hewlett-Packard computer last year through a project funded by the National Institutes of Health intended to provide both access and nine months of digital literacy training.
Edna Ross is strict about how her grandchildren use the computer when they visit. One of her grandsons once sneaked onto the computer and put a picture of himself on his Facebook page making an obscene gesture.
She told him if he could not control himself, he could not use the computer. Training, she said, is crucial.
“If you already have a child who feels like anything goes and you put a computer in his hand,” she said, “he’s going to do the first negative thing he can find to do when he gets on the computer.”
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I think were are comparing a different age group, because unlike a 12 or 12 y/o, I spend vast amounts of time using my computer for homework. I spend a ton of time doing homework period! The article talked about Markiy Cook, the boy who stays up all night playing X box. That certainly isn't me. The whole internet literacy program is stupid. Markiy and The Facebook Freak seem to know how to use the computer pretty well. That isn't the problem. Computers are computers and kids will use them as they see fit. We just need to create an environment where they have to use them to do school work. 10 and 11.5 hours are high because watching tv and using the computer at the same time shouldn't be counted as 2 h. you cant give an hour of attention to both the tv and the computer in the same hour.
ReplyDeleteI agree, the time spent being unproductive on the computer will be different among age groups, so it can be difficult to compare/contrast them.
DeleteI disagree I think the time spent online will not very with age I think that what you do online will change. Teens will read way more blogs and spend more time on Facebook while parents will read more news and spend more time in Pages and Keynote and Numbers.
DeleteThis article doesn’t reflect my online habits. There are some classes where you need a computer to do the homework and I generally do a lot of homework on the computer. I think that a digital literacy program might be helpful for parents, but it’s ultimately up to the kids who use the computer. Parents can always instruct and teach kids how to use the computer for educational purposes, but it’s easy to waste time on a computer. For every educational site that gets created there are probably 5 time-wasting websites that pop up. You either have to monitor yourself or just shut it off. 10-11.5 hours a day seems like too high of a number, so I’d like to know a little more about the study.
ReplyDeleteI agree, I do think that a digital literacy program would be helpful for parents.
DeleteI agree that parents should teach their kid the right way to use computers. Parents should not just give the computer to their children and let them do what ever they want. They should show how to use computers for education.
DeleteI dont entirely believe that this article reflects my online habits. I think that I use the internet and computer for entertainment, but also for school related projects, and planning. Having a HHS gmail account with google docs gives every student at Hanover a chance to use online references for communication and reference. Also, teens and children of this decade are more exposed to technology eventually they will all get familiar with the internet. I do not agree that lower income families spend more time using technology than higher class families. The amount of technology in a household has to do with how lenient the parents are. I feel that these numbers appear relitively high, but in reality people spend alot of time infront of LCD screens daily.
ReplyDeleteIn response to how much time lower income families spend online vs. how much time higher income families spend online everyday I think the answer lies in why people use the computers. People most often use computers to distract themselves from work at hand, trouble at home or work, or even just because they are bored. Internet also has many uses for work for people that need to do research, write papers or programs or check their email. I think those numbers are probably slightly skewed for families such as if you were to calculate the total time on a computer for my family which is slightly above medium income. My dad's job is to manage the servers and systems at Dartmouth so typically 7 or so hours of his day he is on the computer match that with my mom who does clinical research and data analysis so add another 7 and you are already at 14 hours then add my sister and I's time on the computer and you would probably get an addition 5 hours each. So in total my mostly average family spends about 24 hours a day on the computer. Sure you can argue that that is too much but I would guess that approximately 18 hours of those are spent on productive and required work. Such as at this very moment I am completing a blog online while my dad uses inter-mapper to asses problems at work and my mom plots data in excel while my sister writes an essay at school. I think that how old you are necessarily relates to how much time you spend online I think it affects what you do ont he computer. For example I use Facebook roughly 60% more than either of my parents but they spend about the same amount of time online everyday.
ReplyDeleteI think It depends on the ages of the kids using computers. I use my computer a lot for homework, but i also use it for checking in with friends and finding out about information on parties or other events. I do not spend nearly that much time on my computer, for educational or entertainment uses. The article mentions a kid who spends a lot of time playing Xbox, I dont even have an Xbox. The only computer games i can play are online. Because the internet and computers gives us so much freedom it is hard to control the environment in which we use the computers. I think that the two numbers posted are only high if there are being used for entertainment. If they are being used for educational purposes than the numbers are fine.
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DeleteI think the article is trying to show examples of how different kinds of technology affects us. It's not just Facebook that gets us distracted but it's mainly the web, xbox, and any other device that can get online. We all have a certain and specific addiction to media. You could be in love with playing xbox or you could be on your ipod all the time listening to music that most likely creates a distraction
DeleteThis article doesn't reflect all of my online habits. I frequently use social sites, Google, everything, and I watch TV all the time, and who knows, it could be 5 or 10 or 20 hours a day! But fact of the matter is, I find a way to balance my online social life with the schoolwork that needs to get done, whether I chose to or I have to. And I believe this is true for many kids who see the new products and stuff on the market and want to get in on it. It requires a balance and I don't think this article addresses that.
ReplyDeleteI also strongly disagree with this article, mainly because it is saying that rich people, or people who make more than $20,000 a year, don't use the internet, watch TV or go on social networking sites as often as people of a poorer class. Who is to say that it is always like this? Plus, the study was done in 1999, so who are they to state that less educated parents raise children who spend more time with media than children of parents who went to college and have degrees? I know I frequently use the internet for things other than homework, but that doesn't mean my grades are slipping or anyone else's are, no matter what class we are in because of how much money our parents make. I could have parents who are both doctors who make almost $200,000 a year and STILL use the internet 11.5 hours a day. I don't think the use of media has any DIRECT correlation to income of parents in our country. And families where "money is tight" that own an Xbox and a Wii are trying to give their kids the best life they can give them, and if that means entertaining them with some video games, why is that wrong and who even has the right to judge that? I don't disagree that the amount of time spent on social networking sites, playing video games, or watching TV has increased over the past few decades, because it has, but I very strongly disagree with the "study" that compares a low-income family, or single mother, trying to raise her kids and keep them happy versus a family with a pretty comfortable income, buying their children the same things, maybe even for the same reasons, and targeting more harshly at the lower income family.
The numbers are high, but is that related to income? No. That is related to the high amount of new products and devices that connect to the internet, more television shows that catch the minds of teenagers, the continuous production of apps and social networking sites that interest kids, and these non-stop, technological advancements of our time. Everything looks good! And everyone wants to try it; the new iPad, iPhone 4S, new kinect Xbox games, etc. And children that choose their gaming and socializing on the internet over doing schoolwork, are amongst many teens that do the same exact thing. I would rather be on Facebook looking at my friends pictures and talking to people I don't see very often rather than solving my math homework any day!
But taking a step back to what this article is saying, I understand that the rate of children and teens using social media has increased, but you cannot break down the increase inso social class or a statistic based on income of these kids parents. There is little control to what kids do on the internet, and that only affects the kids, but if parents of ANY social class explain to their kids what's important in life and they understand (succeeding in a career you love and making the most out of your life, being the change you want to see in the world) then the use of media will balance out with what teenagers and college students do on the internet.
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ReplyDeleteI noticed how people are denying how the article reflects or relates about them. Most of the people in our class are addicted to getting on the computer and getting distracted by either Facebook, e-mail or Skype. We may do our work but on other tabs we have Facebook or something else up. Most of us would never actually say that we have a habit. It is hard for all of us today to stay on task on one specific thing so we multi task but multi tasking adds more time than necessary to what you're trying to get done. The article may not talk about our age group but if you think about it, it does. We used to be like that and we have gotten worse with our addiction to media.
ReplyDeleteThis article does reflect me and my online habits in school, at home and I see it in the people around me. I am online a lot. My brother is playing xbox all the time even though he should be cleaning the house or mowing the lawn. He has a fit when my mom wants him to get off. It has affected his grades and his learning at times. I have texting on my phone but I rarely use it anymore because that's what Facebook and e-mail is for. I have tried to limit my ways to get online. I don't use my ipod, kindle and phone for internet and I choose not to have a tv in my room. I know that if Facebook is already a huge distraction for me then what would the others do that would affect me and everything else. I prevented that from happening by limiting my ways to allow media interfere. I pay attention more in school, I learn that physically being with people is a lot better and I get things done. Sometimes it's hard for me to stay on task but I do get things done by multitasking but it takes a little bit more time to get it done.
Students and especially I need to realize that school is meant for school work and not entirely socializing or goofing off. It's hard because when you're doing a lot of work sometimes you need a break which is fine. When you choose to get distracted from work because you're tired of it then it can affect everything in your academics. Low income families might supposedly have more time to do what they want. Some might not have jobs or don't work often so they have free time to get online or watch tv. In general both low and high income families do spend a lot of time with media.
The statistics are high and I believe that the article is trying to explain that we all have some addiction to media. We are always on the computer, watching tv, on our cell or doing something that involves with technology. The article is trying to explain to us that technology is a distraction for what we want or need to get done. We are taking advantage of this kind of entertainment.
DeleteThe reason I denied that it reflects my own habits is because of this presented idea that kids with parents who either didn't go to college or don't have a very high paying job, are spending more time on the computer than the opposite (kids of parents who are doctors, or have another high paying job). I certainly have a "habit", I guess you could say. I definitely have the tabs up on my computer for Facebook, Tumblr, etc, plus the iPhone apps. But the only reason I denied that it reflected my own habits is because even though I am constantly connected to social sites, I am also getting my work done.
DeleteI dont think that this artical reflects my online habits, I use the computer for both educational and entertainment purposes, but I don't spend hours on hours on the computer. This artical mentions study that shows that almost kids are using computers mainly for entertainment. This may be true but I disagree that this is because of poor computer education. I think this reflexes the attitudes of the children and not there literacy with computers. This is a job for parents to have higher expectations for there kids. If the Xbox freaks grades are dropping then how about the parents just take away the distractions.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree. I think it's more that the kids know what else is on the internet and that is what they would rather be doing the school work and not they poor computer education.
DeleteI completely agree with you. If parents feel their children are getting distracted by media then they should decide what the kids can and can't use. Also I believe that computer education is not the reason that kids are getting side tracked because even if you are very educated you can still waste a lot of time with media
DeleteThe article kind of reflects my online habits. I don't use the computer just to play games but I do use computer a lot. I kind of use computer in half and half situation. Half is for entertainment and another half is for homework or study. I don't use computer for just entreatments. I use computer a lot to do school works. Students should not use social media while they are doing homework. You can get distracted easily. I don't agree that low income family spent more time than rich family. It actually depends on what their jobs are. Some of them need to use computers at work and some of them don't. 10-11 hours are high but people today depend on computer and other technology. Both high income and low income families spend a lot of time on technologies.
ReplyDeleteI don't think that this article is an accurate comparison of my online habits. This does not mean, however, that I only use my computer for educational purposes. I will admit that on occasion I will put off homework to watch a Youtube video or chat on Facebook, but I don't really spend that long on the computer. In the article they talk a lot about kids only using computers for Facebook and games, even if that is true I don't think that it is because of a lack of computer education but rather a lack of motivation for the kids to do their work. On the other hand I will agree that the internet is very distracting and it is very easy to get off track.
ReplyDeleteI don't think the article relates of my computer habits. i do waste time on it and not everything i do is useful, but the same can be said for many things that people do. I feel like i also learn a lot when i use the computer. a lot of the time when I'm watching videos on youtube I'm trying to learn stuff and i watch videos that interest me not videos about nothing. i feel like i have actually learned quite a bit using youtube. i think that getting kids to work better on the internet is going to be very hard. it may be good to limit the kind of sites school computers can visit, but that does not mean that the whole school internet should be limited because that will restrict people from taking a break during school which is important also. both of the numbers are very high and i think the article is trying to emphasize that kids spend a lot of time on the computer. i think the study should go into more depth though because i feel that many kids use the internet for education almost as much as entertainment. i also think that people need to look deeper into the things kids do online and realize that there may be more education there ten meets the eye at a glance.
ReplyDeleteI would agree about looking deeper into things, it is very important.
DeleteI don't completely agree with much this article has brought forward. I really want to know where all of these statistics came from, what kind of surveys did they do? We don't even know who "they" is. How many people were in these surveys and where were these surveys done? I really would like to know all of this before I am given information. Also I think that adding the time the TV is on and how long the computer is on, that is completely obscene. My grandpa would be the biggest user in that case, he leaves his TV on all day long and he also leaves his computer on all day. When he is on the computer he isn't always paying attention to everything the TV is saying. He also has the radio on and he mutes the TV, does the the radio count? If the radio doesn't count that is a little odd because the TV is the same as the radio if you have your back to the TV. My grandpa also has an iPhone he uses durring the day. All of these add up to WELL over 72 hours of "wasted" time using these so called gagets. This article is far from my habits, I may have facebook open in one tab but I only look at it for MAYBE 30 minutes durring school. I have my laptop open for almost every class taking notes and doing things that are productive.
ReplyDeleteThis article does kind of reflect my habits but I don't play online games. I use it to check my facebook, listen to music on youtube, and watch movies online. Lot of people get distracted by facebook or other entertainment sites instead of using their computers to do their school work. I don't really watch tv or use xbox I only use my computer to do those things. Internet is has a lot of freedom for me. It depends on the ages.
ReplyDeletei agree i use my computer for pretty much just that and HW i do not even have time to do all the stuff they talked about in the reading.
DeleteI do not think that this article reflects my habits online because I do not spend a lot of time on facebook and other sites like that. I spend most of my time on the computer taking notes or making presentations. I feel that if students can't get their work done because of distractions online that parents should put blocks on the sites that these kids use. There are many programs that can be used to monitor web use and to block certain sites if they become to distracting. I defiantly think those numbers are too high but they aren't that different. I think this article is trying to prove that using computers can be helpful but computer time needs to be monitored and kept to a minimum.
ReplyDeletei think the real problem here is lazyness, it seems like for the most part the people doing the stuff they talked about in the article were welfare families, so the real problem is getting them a job and a good work ethic. The internet just seems to be the latest time waister, 70 years ago it might have been hunting 30 years ago it was TV now it is the internet. the real problem we need to fix is the people not the computers
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