In a recent New York Times article “A Parent’s Struggle With a Child’s iPad Addiction”, a confused father wrote about his 6-year-old’s potential iPad addiction. The father uses the word “addiction” because when the iPad is taken away his son gets “bizarrely upset… out-of-character upset…that’s what makes me think he’s addicted”. While many would question the wisdom in letting a child use an iPad, the father contends that his son is not using this new technology to play violent video games, but rather educational apps, and while playing “he’s happy. He’s quiet. He’s engaged”.
According to the father, his son is encouraged “to play creative apps-and most of the time, he does”. The apps mention in the article include Puppet Pals, which is a free creative video app that allows children to make short films using animated cartoons, and EasyBeats, a music app that allows users to create their own complex rhythms one layer at a time.
How could these types of stimulating games be bad? Is taking the iPad away from his son really the right thing to do? Is a gadget or game automatically bad for children just because it is electronic? These are the questions posed by this article and it will be up to future research in this field to answer them for us.
Showing posts with label Addiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Addiction. Show all posts
Monday, March 14, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Warning: Disconnect!
Growing up, my parents taught me the importance of respecting boundaries as well as fiscal responsibility. That said, knowing I have a limited texting plan, I ought to have remained well within the limit, monitoring my use. I know better. But, I did not; I ended up texting nearly double my limit. Thirty dollars is a small fortune to my near-minimum-wage salary, but for my parents, it is earned easily. However, I still feel terrible. Yes, my parents bought me a phone and pay for my phone bill, but how many of my minutes or texts were actually spent on them? These days I'm so busy and socially engaged that I'll call my parents at best, once a day, or, more often than less, receive their calls wondering about my health, safety, and school.
Cellphone Usage Alert |
Well. Not to the phone companies.
Just great. While I agree cellphone users should be responsible with their own usage, extra reminders to monitor usage would really boost responsibility. Mandatory alerts would serve as a wake-up call when you become too caught up texting or going online on your handheld device. It would prompt you to don that mantle of responsibility, helping you realize whether you should adjust your usage or invest in an alternative texting/data plan (i.e. unlimited data plans). But then, a sickening realization hit me. It would really hurt profits for phone companies if we were responsible about our consumption of social technology.The wireless industry’s trade group, C.T.I.A.-The Wireless Association, argues that the F.C.C.’s proposal “violates carriers’ First Amendment protections”; it contends that compelling carriers to provide use alerts is a form of “compelled speech.” So, by this logic, the carriers should be allowed to remain silent while your phone gobbles up data bits beyond your plan’s allocation.The industry says customers can check their current charges by going to their carrier’s Web site and looking them up — or by sending short codes on their phones or installing apps on their smartphones that can provide a tally of minutes and data use. And if customers don’t remember to check, the carriers can shrug and say, “Not our fault.”
In class we've discussed benefits and the many detrimental side effects of being constantly connected, but the one aspect we seem to have overlooked, perhaps, because we do not pay the bills, is the fiscal side. We may feel "good" being connected, but somewhere out there are marketers, phone carriers, and internet providers urging us to fall deeper into the abyss of social technology. So, while the FCC and CTIA wrangle this proposal indefinitely, we should start working on responsibly consuming social technology. As for me, please don't text me until next month.
Labels:
Addiction,
cell phones,
connected,
families,
money,
text messaging
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)