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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Zombie Nation: We Don’t Need No Education…

When I used to teach high school, my students did one thing—and honestly only one thing—that drove me completely batshit-crazy virtually every day.  It wasn’t their styles, their behaviors, their attitudes, or any element of the teenage creature, specifically.  In fact, I should probably mention that I love the American teenager in all of their convoluted, hormone- confused chaotic glory (seriously—they are splendid beings with the most abundant reserves of compassion and beauty that I’ve ever beheld—they’re just simply uncomfortable revealing it in uncertain company, lest it set a precedent that they be held accountable to).  I could write volumes about the best qualities of today’s youth, but I don’t want to stray too far from my original purpose: addressing their solitary flaw.

Now that I begin to write about it, I’m not even sure if I should call it a “flaw”—perhaps I should frame it more as an infection.   The evidence is everywhere—I’ve seen it firsthand: migrating from their pockets and purses, snaking out underneath their hoodies, reflecting upon their faces with a sickly glow—literally.  Their faces are actually illuminated by the electronic glare of the cellular phones, iPods, and the variety of other digital paraphernalia that have completely enzombied (I make words up—just go with it) their attention spans.  While this contagion varies from school to school, district to district, please make no mistake—it holds no regional boundaries and its influence has reached pandemic proportions.

Before you are too quick to dismiss this as a “terrible kids today” or “terrible teacher classroom management”-kind of dilemma, I must step to the defense.  (I may have majored in Literature, but I definitely picked up a minor in devil’s advocacy.)  I do not believe that the young people are consciously trying to be disrespectful—in fact, I don’t believe that they see it as any more disrespectful than we did when we passed notes to one another in Mrs. Rose’s mind-numbing lesson on factoring polynomials.  Today’s kid just has more expensive note-passing tools and, as a number of studies have suggested, a shorter attention span thanks to complete media saturation.  Again, to them, it’s not disrespect—it’s just an element of their cultural DNA.  

In my experience, the blatancy of their inability to adhere to the no-electronic-devices rule varies from school to school—sometimes the students display a great deal of finesse and sophistication in their rebellion…and sometimes, well…let’s just say that I fantasize about ripping their Beats from around their necks and…well…beating them senseless with them.  I do have a certain appreciation for the students who make efforts at subtlety—students have pretended to nap to text, hidden their phones in their sleeves to text, buried themselves in books to text, searched their purses for lengths of time for “something important” to text, used the larger student in front of them as a human shield to text, and borrowed the bathroom pass to leave the room to text (the last one is reserved for only the most courteous offenders, of course).  My favorite ploy?  The young gentlemen’s infamous stretch-and-lean-over-maneuver where they half yawn/ half shuffle around in their pockets languidly, causing the lowest levels of disruption that they possibly can as they text—but it’s still so obvious.  My usual response? 

“Hey [insert name of puckish student here], you’re clearly either masturbating or texting under your desk there and neither one is acceptable in my class so…knock it off.  Now.”

Usually this would arouse a few pink-cheeked laughs and the phones would remain out of my line of sight for the remainder of the period.  Until the next period.  *sigh* I felt like Sisyphus in 4G hell. 

Without boring you with too many of the details, please know that [most] teachers put a ton of thought, planning, and (despite rumors that say we’re all heartless bastards) love into our lessons—we have, on average, five classes per day, thirty kids per class, and about fifty minutes per section to devote to the classroom management, curricular advancement, and socio-emotional welfare of our darling charges, while still trying to make the experience of being locked in a box with us as painless and personally meaningful as we possibly can for them.  (Not complaining, mind you—just dispensing information.  These are simply the challenges of the career—and a source of constant inspiration and joy to a teacher who loves what they do.)  However, when you add battling that loveless little rectangle of circuitry for their attention (let alone their engagement in your lesson) multiplied by all of the offending students, it’s maddening…and more than a little disheartening.  To be clear: they know better.  There is no lack of clarity in the “rules”, including expectations and consequences, which are indelibly etched into the syllabus and the school handbook—but there is absolutely no compliance with this, rendering the teachers/ counselors/ deans absolutely impotent if Little Johnny or Little Sarah’s mommy and daddy want them to have a phone with them in a school building.  In case of an emergency, of course.    

I adapted a lot of my skills as a teacher to circumvent the waning interests of my students and to avert their desire to tune-out from the lesson and tune-in to the latest youtube video.  I stepped up my game—I inserted the media they craved into the lessons I planned wherever possible and I allowed them the freedom to produce electronic projects that connected their world to the work I needed them to accomplish.  Oh, and when that didn’t work?  I’d stalk them.  Yep, I’d roam about the room while presenting information to them and when I spotted my prey, I’d loop back over my tracks to throw off their suspicion and when they were least expecting it—I’d pounce.  I cannot even begin to count the number of phones I snatched in my handful of years as a teacher.  Though I would never publicly read their information any sooner than I would read their notes aloud, I always glanced at the content of their interest—the ego in me had to know what was so much more captivating than the information or activities I had prepared for them.  I could condense my findings down to a couple of generalizations: If I grabbed the phone from a girl you could almost bank upon it being related to shopping, a message to a girlfriend about a guy who was pissing her off, or a message to a guy about said girlfriend who was pissing her off.  If I snagged the phone from a boy, the key topics of discussion were always hot girls, the after-party at the next game, and weed.  Or if the hot girl would be at the after-party after the next game with the weed.  Period.  Yes, ladies and gentlemen, this is the product of your $50+/month child-protection emergency plan: the mating and recreational tool of the American teenager.

Maybe I’m being a bit of bitch, riding along on my tallest pony, taking a little too much smug pride in my possession of an ancient burner cell phone—the same lame Tracfone© that I purchased over six years ago for fourteen dollars and loaded with 400 minutes that I still have yet to dispose of—but is taking satisfaction in not being sewn to a phone such a bad thing?  After all, where do you suppose our children learned their behaviors? I mean, who…exactly…taught our kids to value these devices to the degree that they do?  Before I explore my hypothesis, I will acquiesce to the fact that we know that the kids were sent to the schools accompanied by these phones with the very best intentions—they were intended to be a means to stay in convenient contact, an attractive global positioning device to keep the precious progeny locatable at all times.  Why, as the child of a single mother for the better part of my life, I know from personal experience the neurosis of always having an emergency dime—then, as the years passed, an emergency quarter—in my pocket so that I could always check in with my mom from a payphone.  Hell, in my youth (Oh. My. God. I just joined the “back in my day”-gang, didn’t I?), kids weren’t generally allowed to travel outside the boundaries of their mom’s shouting range—but the liberation of the cell-phone generation comes with the price of being at the electronic snap of the parents’ beck and (ha ha) call.  As I drive my daughter home from school, I have seen kindergarteners and first-graders walking along, cheerfully tapping away on their tiny digital leashes.  From PSPs to DSiXLs and from Kindles to the latest iGeneration contraptions, the importance of near-constant digital entertainment/communication has been ingrained into young people for so long, how could they be faulted for revering these items and feeling like constantly engaging with them is the norm? 

My husband and I took our two daughters to a local park last week for an outdoor viewing of the film “Megamind”—a family favorite.  As we were merrily munching our popcorn and reciting the movie out loud, line for line (yeah, we’re not just annoying people at a movie…we’re THE annoying people at a movie), I scanned the four-hundred-or-so people around us in the park, curious to see if we were bothering anyone.  What do you suppose I saw from my collapsible captain’s chair in the dusky twilight?  Pods of families, most with two or more children watching the film, escorted by two eerily illuminated parental units sitting behind them, fingers flicking into the night as they scanned their emails, updated their facebooks, tweeted urgent nonsense to their followers, and disengaged from the family connection experience entirely.  The alien quality of the moment was so surreal that I had to hunker down in my chair and inhale a second package of Twizzlers just to help me calm my nerves. 

I won’t be a hypocrite: I love my facebook and I, too, have bought my children’s silence and/or compliance with an app or two when the moment required solemnity—sometimes an electronic gag is truly a parent’s best (if only) friend.  But seriously—when did you last have an in-person conversation with someone that exceeded fifteen minutes where they didn’t check their phone at least once (or twitch noticeably from the intrinsic compulsion to do so)?  When was the last time you saw a family out and about where one or more (or all) of the members wasn’t searching their brittle little glow boxes with greater interest or intimacy than they were the eyes and emotions of their own familial company?  Think about it—restaurants, games, movies, malls, waiting rooms, road trips—all places where wonderful, informal conversations used to happen because the people only really had one another to talk to.  Now virtually everyone travels with their electronic entourage and multi-tasks their way into shallow waters with the real people that matter most to them in life.  We all know this somewhere, deep in our collective consciousness—but what are we going to do about it?  What will be the product of this digital revolution…how will it all end?  And in the meantime, the state of American education continues to decline—much to the chagrin of the parents, teachers, administrators, and the society of community that raised them: But how can we blame the children for following the trail we have blazed for them?  I predict something like the old 80’s public service announcement where the father harangues the child until he tells him how he learned to smoke marijuana and finally the boy bleats out the same response we deserve: I learned it by watching you.

Damn it, they’re good kids—the next time adults feel inclined to point their fingers at one of them in judgment, they should take a look at the ones pointed back at themselves…you know, the ones probably holding their phones.  I’m pretty sure that Alexander Graham Bell probably did not foresee this over a century ago—but I’m also pretty sure that half of the Americans reading this couldn’t tell me what, exactly, Alexander Graham Bell has to do with this matter (at least, not without first checking Wikipedia on their mobiles for the answer). 

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