Technology: It’s Making Me Stupid

1285 Words3 Pages

As growing up in the “techie” generation, technology has had a major impact in my life. I haven’t had to take computer learning classes to inform me on how to use a computer, I haven’t had to have an explanation on how to txt, and I didn’t need help navigating my way around MySpace. I just knew. It’s not as though I’m a super-genius, (that’s, by far, not the case.) it’s just the era in which I was born and raised. And, at often times, I wish I was born in a different time period, away from all this technology that makes me feel like, second by second, I’m losing fewer and fewer much needed brain cells. I can honestly say that I believe I am far from stupid, although, on the other hand, I believe if it wasn’t for technology, my writing and math grades wouldn’t be as high. These are two of my favorite subjects, and also two of my highest grades. Both of these classes, though, require some help from technology to help me out a bit. My calculator does so much more than other calculators. No, it’s not a graphing calculator, but I could care less about that. With square roots, if the answer isn’t a perfect square, it will simplify the answer to the simplest form, with fractions, it simplifies them to reduced fractions, and with pi, it simplifies all answers to where no decimal is needed, just a number and good ol’ pi. Although, if I do, by any chance need my answers as a decimal, my calculator can do that, too, with just a simple push of a button. I could do all these operations on my own, but it’s just so much simpler and less time-consuming to let the calculator do some the work for me. As stated earlier, technology has helped me with writing, along with mathematics. Typing in Microsoft Word is like my guardian angel of spellin... ... middle of paper ... ...ts it in his article The Social Man: Would You Like to Delete This Friend?, I feel like “some well-intentioned version of a pervert with a pair of night-vision goggles, hiding in his neighbor’s tree.” Yet, on the opposite hand, I just don’t care about what those little pictures show or those fake “About Me”s say. Maybe I’m being a little hypocritical, but that’s just the way I, Heather Whaley, not whly.hthr, feel. Works Cited Breathed, Berkely. “Life with Opus.” The Tennessean: 25 Feb. 2007 Green Day. “American Idiot.” American Idiot. Reprise/WEA, 2004. Levin, Todd. “The Social Man: Would You Like to Delete This Friend?” GQ March 2009: 162- 164. Nelson, Jim. “Letter from the Editor: You Are Amazingly Popular (Google It).” GQ April 2009: 50. Stites, Theodora. “Someone to Watch Over Me (on a Google Map).” New York Times 9 July 2006. ww.newyorktimes.com.

Open Document