Are you suggesting that kids today are smarter than we were when we were their age? I remain unconvinced.
The gadgetry has certainly bred impatience. And again, there's lots to point out with the young folks...in business, in social settings, in work ethic, etc. but I don't think they're dumb. Far from it.
http://news.yahoo.com/professor-says-kids-no-longer-learn-spelling-grammar-132007441.htmlSeveral skills that every kid once learned in school are going the way of the dodo in a hurry. Diagramming sentences is practically an extinct art, for example. Cursive handwriting and memorized multiplication tables look to be swiftly headed that way. Apparently, the next thing that kids will no longer need to learn is spelling and grammar.
Spelling and grammar are “a bit unnecessary because they are skills that were very essential maybe 100 years ago but they are not right now,” Mitra said. “Firstly, my phone corrects my spelling so I don’t really need to think about it and, secondly, because I often skip grammar and write in a cryptic way.”
Wow that was an eye opener. she states "my phone does all the spelling so why would I need to know how to spell " can you believe that , boy I hope her phone never dies LOL !
That's the problem right there, relying on a gadget instead of your brain .
Thanks for sharing that with us.
All the Best ,Fashion Frank
One of the reasons I think we dropped the obsessive teaching of those very carefully formed letters in the UK was because most people are crap at it, and never become good at it. This is un-necessarily demoralising for a child.
I've never met anyone with handwriting I couldn't read after a fashion. My worst experience was trying to convince American undergraduates to PRINT their name at the top of an exam paper, so that we could read it. Most of them would use their signature (a sign of extreme pretension), not caring that we had to alphabetise the papers, and that a poorly formed stylised upper case "D" looks just like a poorly formed upper case "G", etc.
Far more worrying is the lack of understanding of the construction of a sentence, let alone a paragraph. This is the stuff that's important (both to the communicator and to the person being addressed), not how neat a kid's writing is.
I think that's grossly overstating it. Most people today know a lot more math than their grandparents did, at least the concepts, which is far more important than memorizing things like "times tables".
And there's nothing wrong with using a calculator for complicated functions, or even simple ones for that matter. I'm sure there were people 100 years ago who complained about the "kids these days" who couldn't do simple calculus without the help of a slide rule.
The gadgetry has certainly bred impatience. And again, there's lots to point out with the young folks...in business, in social settings, in work ethic, etc. but I don't think they're dumb. Far from it.
Reader beware. Possibly the most important part of that article is "reports the Daily Mail".
To a British person, this speaks volumes. The Daily Mail is a meme. It represents, and caters to, all the small minded "it was better back then", bring back the birch/hanging/hanging's too good for 'em, little England, reactionary attitudes, types who tend to jump on these quotes and spin them out of any semblance of reality.
I see that the Mail is quoting The Times, itself not really an overly credible source of news (Murdoch press) which also has a reputation for a bit of head-in-the-sand NIMBYism.
I'm willing to bet Mitra has been misquoted somewhere.
We're back to Socrates again, really.
I don't need to learn to spell because I have spellcheck on my computer
I don't need to learn math because I have a calculator
I don't need to learn to write because I have a keyboard
I don't need to learn facts because I can look them up on the internet.
Here is a CD of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Give me my PhD.