Is
the Internet overhyped?
Melvyn D. Magree
Originally published in
Northland Reader
now
Reader Weekly
May 25, 2000
Melvyn D. Magree
Originally published in
Northland Reader
now
Reader Weekly
May 25, 2000
“We know we must connect all our classrooms to the Internet...” (Pres. William J. Clinton, State of the Union Address, January 27, 2000) (1)
Really? The band room? The wood shop? The English class?
Does the band room need Internet access to provide music? Or would the money be better spent on buying sheet music and acquiring and maintaining instruments?
Does the wood shop need Internet access to provide project plans? Or would the money be better spent on acquiring and maintaining tools?
Does the English class need Internet access to provide copies of Shakespeare? Or would the money be better spent on buying hardcover copies of Shakespeare, Richard Wright, and Ursula K. Le Guin?
Clinton’s statement and similar statements by many others are indicative more of a mania to adopt the “latest and greatest” without thinking through all the consequences. This mania is seen both in government and private organizations. Sometimes it comes from the top down, sometimes from the bottom up.
“OK, Mr. Author, if the Internet is such a mania, how come you make so much use of it for your articles? And if you use it, shouldn’t school kids learn to use it?” Yes and no.
Yes, the Internet can be a wonderful tool, but it can also be a great waste of time. “A library is where you go to find facts. The web is more like a garage sale: it's possible you'll find what you want, but only with a lot of digging, searching, and wading through things that smell funny.” (2)
I found out just how true this was in researching this article. I’ll come back to this later.
No, school children can learn to use the Internet at anytime in their lives. I am active in the University for Seniors at UMD. Many of the members are using computers for a wide variety of tasks. Many of them first used a personal computer within the last ten years. The successful users among them have two common traits: a love of learning and an ability to type.
“Even some usually pro-technology types, like Apple Computer Co. founder Steven Jobs, have expressed doubts [about computers in schools], suggesting that what students need is more classroom focus on basics like writing and mathematics and higher-level skills such as critical thinking.” (3)
Because Frank James paraphrased Steve Jobs, I wanted to find Jobs’ own words. I did a search with Alta Vista for “critical thinking”, “steve jobs” “apple”, and “education”. Alta Vista found 39 web pages. The first page was an Apple page of “Hot News”. I searched it for “critical thinking”, but it had changed! It was the only Apple page of the thirty-nine.
I checked a few other pages, but most of them “smelled funny”. So, I decided to start with Apple’s home page and search within Apple’s own site. I did a search of “critical thinking, steve jobs”, but my browser (Internet Explorer 4.5 for the Macintosh) wouldn’t load the page! The URL (or address) that Apple’s search feature created was so long that it wouldn’t even fit in the error message window! I couldn’t even search for “Jobs”!!!
One of the Internet success stories is Amazon.com, a bookseller! In fact, if you do a search for something on the internet, you are quite likely to find reviews of books on the subject rather than the text as written by the original authors. Of course, you can search the Internet for free because the search site depends heavily on revenues from booksellers who want to sell you books on the subject of your choice.
One of the most optimistic works on the future of technology is Bill Gates’ The Road Ahead. It is available in good old-fashioned paper form. The only way to get the electronic form (a CD-ROM) is to buy the book. I searched for “the road ahead” on the internet, and no Microsoft page was in the first 10 pages of the 3,997 found. I went to Microsoft’s home page and did a search for “the road ahead”. The first 10 pages of the 67 found were not the text of the book. I did find that the CD-ROM might have an error! (However, on August 2, 2007, the page describing the error is no longer available.) (
Should computers be in schools at all? Of course computers should be in schools, in appropriate places. The first is in typing, sorry, keyboarding. Who wants to learn to type on a big heavy mechanical typewriter like I did over 40 years ago? But we don’t need to have the latest, biggest, fastest computers to teach typing. Even a Commodore 64 can do that. The second is in the library as an addition to a great, humongous collection of books.
For it is from books and great mentors that we learn writing, mathematics, and critical thinking. Let us make sure we have well-stocked libraries and highly-respected teachers. When we have achieved those two goals, then maybe we can think about adding computers.
(1)I accessed this quote May 4, 2000 at http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/SOTU00/sotu-text.html. That page is no longer available. I imagine each President deletes his predecessor's records after the National Archives has copied them. However, the Clinton library's copy of the speech does not have that phrase or any other mention of connecting classrooms to the Internet! After an exchange of emails with an archivist I learned that there is a briefing copy and a transcript. My search had only turned up the briefing copy. The archivist gave me the link to The American Presidency Project's copy. and the correct link in the Clinton library. I couldn't find the latter because I searched on the date of the speech, but the speech was indexed under the date of inclusion into the web site! Searching the web is not always a solo endeavour.
(2) “Kev's Collection of Cool Quotes”, Kevin Killion, accessed August 2, 2007. Kevin moved from the URL that I originally had.
(3) “Plan to wire all schools to Internet falls behind”, Chicago Tribune Online, Frank James, Chicago Tribune Washington Bureau, June 22, 1999, file available in Chicago Tribune paid archive.
©2000, 2007 Melvyn D. Magree