Posted on Jun 28, 2019
Are reading and writing falling by the wayside due to the surge in technology, especially hand held devices?
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I have been a teacher of English, reading, and ESOL (English as a second language) for more than twenty years. When I first started teaching, we had one reading teacher for a high school of more than four thousand students. There were 20 reading teachers at that same high school when I transferred to a different school. I noticed that the increase of cell phones affected my students' writing because of the use of text messaging abbreviations and shorter choppy sentences written for speed. Reading research sources for critical thinking skills also began to suffer because students would simply look up topics on their phones without reading in depth from many different authors. I ask this question because I have heard many officers and NCOs complain about the reading and writing skills of newer recruits. Reading SOPs, regulations, Field Manuals, and Technical Manuals are essential for proficiency and promotion. Writing is a mandatory skill for soldier evaluations, debriefings and field reports, and award recommendations. Every student I teach in middle school has a phone on them (some parents insist that their child must have a phone in case they need to make contact with them). It is a struggle every day to get them to focus on the skills I am teaching rather than playing music, videos, and games. I have heard that this is even a problem in BCT, Boot Camp, and advanced training.
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Responses: 13
Unfortunately yes. Working in the law enforcement side of things, we have to take reports from the public fairly often. One day I had a TSgt come in to report that she had lost her wallet and ID. As I’m writing the report, I hand her my pen so she can write her statement. She was having a difficult time writing with a pen and paper because everything she does is either on her computer or text. I fear I will be seeing this come up a lot more in the future.
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SSgt Richard Kensinger
as a retired psychology professor w/ 13 years experience, indeed it has and more seriously is diminishing critical thinking which is quite necessary to academic achievement.
Rich
Rich
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