Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Technology is inescapable, but

  • has it improved learning?

  • Is it possible that the way

  • we're using technology

  • is making us worse readers?

  • Are we all becoming

  • a bunch of non-critical readers

  • with 6-second attention spans?

  • Stick around

  • and let's think about it.

  • [music]

  • [snap]

  • Hi. Welcome to Snap Language.

  • Marc Franco here.

  • Kevin left this comment

  • to a recent video:

  • ["I would say I was once

  • an avid reader

  • before my Smartphone came along

  • and pretty much took

  • all of the time

  • I used to devote to long-form text.

  • Do sports blurbs and Facebook

  • count as reading?

  • I consider them

  • fast food for the brain."]

  • Well, I guess, just like food,

  • technology can be good

  • or bad for you.

  • A lot of research shows that,

  • depending on how it's used,

  • technology can actually

  • enhance learning.

  • Technology gives us quick access

  • to a large volume of information

  • that was unimaginable

  • not long ago.

  • But new technologies also create

  • new concerns...

  • perhaps because we don't

  • understand its impact yet.

  • Some studies suggest that

  • technology can support

  • teaching and learning.

  • Other studies suggest

  • that young Americans

  • are turning to the Internet

  • instead of using their textbooks.

  • That can be alarming to some

  • because, let's be honest,

  • there is a lot of junk

  • on the Internet.

  • But then... perhaps it's about

  • educating learners on how to be

  • informed users of technology

  • so they know how to evaluate

  • the information.

  • Limiting learners to a single source

  • is like giving them

  • only pea soup when

  • they have a whole buffet

  • right in front of them.

  • (I like pea soup, though...)

  • It's no surprise that

  • a lot of textbooks have

  • companion websites and apps.

  • Publishers know learners want

  • to supplement their learning that way,

  • so publishers make good use

  • of the available technology.

  • Way back in 2002, Stephanie Harvey

  • realized that her classroom

  • had mostly fiction books around

  • for her students.

  • But adults read a variety of

  • both fiction and nonfiction,

  • so she recommended using

  • online resources to give students

  • a variety of materials.

  • That can actually motivate students

  • to use the Internet to read more

  • and learn on their own.

  • Most instructors know that

  • they can (and should)

  • integrate technology

  • into their classrooms.

  • But why would you include

  • social media, blogs,

  • YouTube, and other resources

  • that some may consider

  • "time wasters?"

  • It's important to use what's relevant

  • to learners as a springboard

  • for learning.

  • Some say social media is

  • the "gateway drug" to

  • consumer products.

  • Can't social media also be used

  • as a "gateway drug"

  • to reading and learning?...

  • Leave a comment below and

  • let us know what you think.

  • But we don't read only

  • for academic purposes.

  • I often read because

  • I have a reason to.

  • Other times, I find something so

  • fascinating that

  • I want to know more, so

  • I read about it.

  • The problem is the Internet has both

  • good information and

  • misinformation.

  • Who posted the information?

  • What sources did they use?

  • Are they experts in the field?

  • If we can't tell, we must

  • take the information

  • with a grain of salt.

  • But that's the key point!

  • If we're really interested

  • in something, we make sure

  • it's from a reputable source.

  • We compare different sources.

  • We question the information.

  • So, social media,

  • a short article on the Internet,

  • even a YouTube video,

  • can be a starting point

  • of your interest.

  • I don't see anything

  • wrong with that.

  • Our fellow viewer called this

  • "fast food for the brain."

  • It can also be "an appetizer"

  • for the brain

  • Another concern, especially

  • regarding social media, is that

  • it may give you a false sense of

  • understanding a topic.

  • You read a short blurb

  • about something

  • and you think

  • "I know this... I read about it!"

  • (on a tweet)...

  • Don't do this ...

  • that's just silly ...

  • Ultimately, it's up to us

  • to be critical readers and

  • choose to find more and better

  • information about a topic.

  • [snap]

  • Back to our original questions,

  • does reading short messages in

  • social media help

  • or get in the way of developing

  • our reading skills?

  • Is technology making us

  • worse readers?

  • I don't think there's

  • a clear-cut answer.

  • We all have different experiences

  • with the language, most of which

  • we create ourselves.

  • Maybe it is true that

  • easy access to information

  • also made it easier for us to read

  • from a single source

  • and with little depth of thought.

  • But was it any different in the past?

  • Before the digital age,

  • was everyone a critical reader?

  • I'm not so sure about that...

  • Being educated consumers of

  • information has been and

  • should always be

  • integral to literacy regardless where

  • the information comes from.

  • Do you seek out more information

  • about things that interest you?

  • Are we becoming worse readers?

  • Are we becoming worse thinkers

  • or worse learners?

  • I'd like to know what you think,

  • so leave a comment below.

  • uh... you can give us your opinion

  • or read more about it

  • and let us know.

  • Please like this video

  • and subscribe.

  • Let's help this community grow

  • so more people can get

  • smarter through language.

  • And until the next time,

  • thanks for stopping by

  • and watching this video.

  • [music]

Technology is inescapable, but

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

A2

社交媒體和技術對掃盲和學習的影響 (Impact of social media and technology on literacy and learning)

  • 110 17
    Pedroli Li posted on 2021/01/14
Video vocabulary