Though the statistics are staggering I have begun to think
about the world our students are growing up in. The graphic above shares what
people do online in 60 seconds! 60 seconds is the time it takes to microwave
food, the amount of time my Mia face brush runs for, or could be the amount of
time I ask students to think about things. However in those same 60 seconds
there are $83,000 in Amazon sales, 104 photos shared in Snapchat, 278 tweets,
and 1.8 million likes on Facebook! In a decade when our students hit twenty
those numbers will be astronomical and I am assuming there will be new sites
and things created that our students will be accessing. Ten years ago we did
not have Facebook, Pinterest, snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, etc. to occupy our
time. I think back to the how I registered for college classes on a rotary
phone, was one of 10 people in an entire dorm who had a personal computer (It
was an Apple), and my cell phone was huge (Zack Morris style) and stuck to the
car. I was told it was for emergencies only. Now my phone is a personal
computer!
When people ask me if I think having my students on the
Google Drive is too young my immediate answer is what is too young? These
students are growing up in a rapidly changing world and need to be taught how
to communicate, collaborate, create, innovate, and think. The drive has been a
blessing for me in teaching those lifelong learning skills. It will also help
our students be better prepared for those undiscovered technologies and
platforms that will come their way ten years from now. I also think these
students will be ready for the work place. In 60 seconds I watched students
create an animation that exhibits human influences in the rain forest, choose
an image to import into a slideshow, chat with a friend in Google Hangouts to
figure out what they were working on, respond to a prompt, draw an image,
create a table, and design a presentation. A lot can happen in 60 seconds. It
is hard enough to capture it all. However it is imperative to see what our
students are doing in 60 seconds so we can learn from them and start to see the
world through their eyes. The world is changing and as Ferris Bueller wisely
said so many years ago, “Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look
around once in a while, you could miss it.”
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