We live in a technological age where it often seems that
everything is coming at us all at once and information overload is the edge of
a cliff we teeter on daily. My son, who is not even 3 years old, plays games on
my iPad and has his own tablet – a Nabi. Watching him navigate the programs –
some educational and some not – has led me to question whether it serves a
greater good or harmful to his cognitive development.
I know he is learning hand-eye coordination and being
exposed to a great many ideas, enhanced vocabulary and even the beginnings of
critical thinking skills, but is there a hidden cost? Parenting magazine had an
article entitled “The Right Technology for Kids at Every Age.” The answer,
according to the article’s author, Gwenn Schurgin O’Keeffe M.D., the American
Academy of Pediatric’s tech expert, isn’t entirely helpful in settling the
question. She believes, “there really is no ‘right’ age to allow our kids to
dip a toe into the digital pond.”
O’Keeffe proclaims that thanks to technology we are free to
open “the mind to an almost endless expanse of knowledge.” She went on to list
different devices
and apps and what your child should be able to do with such devices at
different ages. The only warning I found was about cell phones emitting
electromagnetic fields and a child’s developing skull being thinner than that
of an adult. But doesn’t knowledge of any sort require a context, a level of
maturity to process and value it? Can we integrate knowledge and use it without
that gate? Should we even try? On that, O’Keefe is silent.
0 comments:
Post a Comment