« Paul Kedrosky: VC Is Broken | Main | How We Are Made Great »

July 27, 2008

The New Literacy and The Enemies Of The Future

As usual, the forces of centrality are fighting against the wrong opponents. Instead of being happy that kids are spending less time watching television and more time engaged in social activities through the web, everyone, including Motoko Rich in today's NY Times, wants to fight a 20th century war all over again, and gripe about kids not reading books.

[Literacy Debate - Online, R U Really Reading? - Series - NYTimes.com]

Children are clearly spending more time on the Internet. In a study of 2,032 representative 8- to 18-year-olds, the Kaiser Family Foundation found that nearly half used the Internet on a typical day in 2004, up from just under a quarter in 1999. The average time these children spent online on a typical day rose to one hour and 41 minutes in 2004, from 46 minutes in 1999.

And every minute is a minute not spent watching TV, note.

Don't get me wrong. I am all for traditional reading -- as in reading books. I am aware that reading comprehension is valued by employers, and forms the basis of contemporary notions of higher education.

Nicholas Carr and a long list of other media curmudgeons have argued that the web is making us stupid:

Critics of reading on the Internet say they see no evidence that increased Web activity improves reading achievement. “What we are losing in this country and presumably around the world is the sustained, focused, linear attention developed by reading,” said Mr. Gioia of the N.E.A. “I would believe people who tell me that the Internet develops reading if I did not see such a universal decline in reading ability and reading comprehension on virtually all tests.”

Nicholas Carr sounded a similar note in “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” in the current issue of the Atlantic magazine. Warning that the Web was changing the way he — and others — think, he suggested that the effects of Internet reading extended beyond the falling test scores of adolescence. “What the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation,” he wrote, confessing that he now found it difficult to read long books.

What we seem to be doing is creating a context -- the Web -- where we are stressing different cognitive capabilities in the brains of our young people, and the outcomes will be different. We are moving away from sustained, linear, focused concentration as our principal mode of reasoning.

Note the implicit and unstated message: reasoning should principally be a solitary pursuit, not a social one. Among other aspects of the shift in cognition, the primary one -- not really explored in the Times article at all -- is toward a social, shared, and interactive mode of reasoning.

In the case of kids studying today, not only are they online researching instead of reading a book in a library carrell, they are also instant messaging and facebooking with their schoolmates the entire time. The elephant in the room is the movement from solitary studying to a collective, hivemindish mode of learning, where kids are shifting for questioning to answering, from learning to teaching all the time.

This is totally ignored here because it doesn't match the testing discipline -- where individual kids are tested on linear, focused, and sustained reading -- and the underlying premises of our educational system, which is to produce good little individual economic cogs. Meanwhile, the kids are turning themselves into self-organized networks where collective productivity is the central aim. But instead of trying to examine why kids gravitate to this new mode of operation, all the experts worry that the kids' pineal glands will dry up:

Neurological studies show that learning to read changes the brain’s circuitry. Scientists speculate that reading on the Internet may also affect the brain’s hard wiring in a way that is different from book reading.

“The question is, does it change your brain in some beneficial way?” said Guinevere F. Eden, director of the Center for the Study of Learning at Georgetown University. “The brain is malleable and adapts to its environment. Whatever the pressures are on us to succeed, our brain will try and deal with it.”

Some scientists worry that the fractured experience typical of the Internet could rob developing readers of crucial skills. “Reading a book, and taking the time to ruminate and make inferences and engage the imaginational processing, is more cognitively enriching, without doubt, than the short little bits that you might get if you’re into the 30-second digital mode,” said Ken Pugh, a cognitive neuroscientist at Yale who has studied brain scans of children reading.

This is a revolution, so the powers that be will resist it. They will say what we are doing is illegitimate, that we are losing more than we have gained, that we won't fit in, that we are losing critical skills essential to our careers. What we have gained they will deride: they'll say we are the lesser offspring of greater forebears, moving far too fast from a golden age into a debased and irrational future.

Yes, and if the environment is changing -- we live in a world where the web will likely be the primary medium of work, play, and learning in the future -- shouldn't we change? If it is inducing new ways to think, shouldn't we examine what they are instead of just grumping about leaving behind the old? Now that we drive cars, we have to learn new skills, decidedly different from riding horses: isn't that reasonable?

Neurological studies show that learning to read changes the brain’s circuitry. Scientists speculate that reading on the Internet may also affect the brain’s hard wiring in a way that is different from book reading.

Clearly, learning how to use the web effectively is a critical skill, and one that is likely to be much more useful than a deep understanding of the Dewey Decimal System, just like typing is more useful skill these days that Gregg shorthand.

There is some interest in actively training students to use the web effectively, but as indicated by the article, educators are missing the social element of the social revolution, and persist in wanting to measure individual performance in research-type tasks. Meanwhile, the kids are reshaping their cognition to include non-linear, shared, and interruptive modes of thinking, exactly the kind of reasoning about the world that Carr and other will consider stupidity.

The web will reorder our core perceptions, of time, of purpose, of authority and relevance. We move into a realm where our identity is linked to our network of contacts and our shared activities: we are increasingly defined though our relationships with others, instead of our membership in organizations, like schools, clubs, or citizenship.

This is a revolution, so the powers that be will resist it. They will say what we are doing is illegitimate, that we are losing more than we have gained, that we won't fit in, that we are losing critical skills essential to our careers. What we have gained they will deride: they'll say we are the lesser offspring of greater forebears, moving far too fast from a golden age into a debased and irrational future.

But they don't really even talk about what we have learned, what we now value, where we think we are headed. They are afraid, so they spread fear.

Virginia Postrel characterized those that resist the upside of progress and who argue that we are falling into a darker time as the enemies of the future, and no where are the battle lines more clear than the debate about children and the Web. At the superficial level, this is akin to the 20th Century griping when educators finally stopped forcing children to learn Latin and ancient Greek, when classicists were sure that Western civilization would collapse.

Personally, I am happy that kids are watching less TV, which Robert Putnam in Bowling Alone characterized as a pernicious disease dissolving society's connective tissue.

The larger issues -- particularly the subtle and not-so-subtle shifts in human cognition from constant exposure to the web, and the rise of web-based sociality -- will need a much broader examination than offered by the Times in this piece, although I admit that it is wider-scoped than many others I have read in recent years.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c50ba53ef00e553bce78b8833

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The New Literacy and The Enemies Of The Future:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

We must go deeper and ask: Why do we read? What is it we wish our children to accomplish by reading? And Can we accomplish those objectives in a medium more suited to the NetGenerations?

A born marketer and collector of life experiences, I decided to stop judging and join in on the social conversation. I continue to be delighted & amazed at what I see transpiring amongst the young and not-so-young people online.

I adore reading a good book, yet most of what I need to know is coming from Twitter friends / bloggers/ News sites informing or directing me to informative and entertaining vids, posts & conversations. I spend ALOT of time online.

Young people are doing just fine, thank-you-very-much. Wagging our fingers will be one sure fire way our valuable viewpoints will be excluded from consideration.

Change is coming. I'd love to see critics turn their focus on helping all young people participate. Bet we'd see the drop-out rate start to decline!

Twitter: Meryl333

Needless to say, this argument is a familiar one within education circles and, thankfully, one where the arguments you make are made every day to 'win' this battle against ignorance and simplistic thinking. Good to see it outside the 'normal' education sphere.

Seems to me we need both forms of reading, thinking, mental exercise. Neither one strikes me as being "enough." Passive TV viewing, by contrast, strikes me as a generally bad idea all the way around.

It all comes down to the willingness to embrace change. The change in cognition due to the Internet is inevitable, no matter how many articles are written bemoaning the demise of the book.
That brings to mind the endless debate about the demise of classical music. A year ago we started our organization fully aware that we may evolve away from a youth orchestra playing classical music. If there is no interest, what is the point in forcing the kids to play Beethoven? We can only interest the children in music for the long term if we let them take it where they want to go with it.
Your post has me thinking that we should reframe our thinking about our ensembles. They are a social phenomena--that's the whole point: bringing youth musicians together to collaborate through music. Perhaps that is why El Sistema in Venezuela is so successful. It is a community for the children of the barrios.

Bah humbug! (I just felt someone should say that because the critics have said everything else.)

I had the privilege of working with a 22-year-old college student last summer. I had him creating short training videos. One day I sent him off to find a video editing package. He back an hour later. He had: found three software packages, downloaded trial versions of each, decided which one met all our requirements, and wrote a bill of materials for me.

And some people continue to lament how stupid these kids are. Stowe, I guess you and I are similar in age (50 +or- 5). I am often embarrassed by people my age who still don't know what a blog is.

In my experience, "kids" who are plugged into social media can accomplish far more in much less time than "mature adults" who ONLY read textbooks.

Kids will read the long, linear books when those books provide useful information. Don't blame the lack of book reading on the readers - blame it on the writers and publishers.

Dwayne - I am not really fixated on productivity. The argument that personal efficiency the only justification for web literacy is just wrong. It's nice if it happens, but that's not really what we are up to.

Jeanne - Keep me posted.

John - Maybe, but kids see, to be moving away from the old form, so 'need' has to be examined carefully.

Ewan - Cool.

Meryl - Well, I don't think we need the critics turning their focus to 'helping' young people. As you point out, the kids think they are doing fine.

absolutely incredibly profound, and i would bet that not very many people have the ability to get it.

very leading edge listening. it is one thing to see a trend, it is another to be already living there, watching the world come towards you.

and it is this way because consciousness is this way

This question will definitely relegate me to the delete bin of old timers who just don't get it, but are you saying that while learning to be a group thinker (i.e., making decisions based on your peers' opinions, conforming to the majority as a matter of course, collectivism, whatever) makes you a free individual, but independent thinking (i.e., making decisions based on your own research of the available facts & your own opinions, refusing to conform to the majority without being convinced that the majority knows what it's talking about, individualism, whatever) makes you a "cog"? Isn't a cog a part of a larger whole?? Isn't a group comprised of individuals?????

This seems totally backwards to me. I officially "just don't get it". I don't even understand how this can be called a revolution. What are you revolting against? Private thought? Freedom of opinion outside a group setting? To me, this just seems scary. But, as I said, I admittedly just don't get it...

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.