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University Declares a Week Without Social Media
University Declares A Week Without Social Media
"What if one day Facebook, Twitter and Instant Messenger just weren't there? Provost Eric Darr of Harrisburg University of Science and Technology in Pennsylvania tells NPR's Guy Raz that he wanted his students to not only think about this question, but live it." http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...ryId=129813420 I think this is great. Students who participate will learn great lessons not only in communication, but in time management. |
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I do agree that FB is a great tool to get back in touch with people that you don't really have time for daily interactions with, but when I took classes over the last couple of years, it would drive me bonkers when students were texting while professors were lecturing (because I had to keep hearing all the buzzing) and couldn't believe when students took calls during class. It was often difficult to get a computer in the lab and nearly impossible in the library because of FB and MySpace. |
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Funny story about phones and the ancient times (1989). My first semester, my room mate and I decided to get the phone plan where you pay for each call, including local calls. We thought, who are we going to call locally? Calling our families were "toll calls" (different part of the state) and long distance (out of state). We didn't think that we'd be calling other people on campus, ordering food, etc. Every local call cost like 3 cents a minute, which added up (we knew we'd have to pay to call our parents or friends at other schools). My second semester, my new roommate already had "local service", and my dad gave me a calling card to call home with, so that was golden. Sigh. I still remember when payphones were 10 cents. They changed that in 1982. |
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I agree that those are problems, but they're not communication or time-management problems. They're courtesy, respect and boundary problems. |
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I saw this story somewhere else, and someone pointed out that this might not be an overall good idea because people have also come to rely on social media for actual productive/important reasons, like keeping in touch with family who are overseas or sick. |
There's no way I could go a week without social media as a student... since Social Media Marketing is a course on my curriculum this semester :)
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See. It'd take forever. ;) |
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I think it would be a very interesting experiment. There is such a thing as too much access and maybe this will trigger the students (and staff!) to turn off their phones every once in a while. I can't travel without my laptop any more, and that's just sad. But I still don't have the interweb on my phone. I like to justify that as, you know, not THAT much dependence on the web. Don't lecture me. I KNOW!
Do sororities have phone duty any more? |
I started college in 1993, and our campus didn't automatically set you up with e mail. You had to go to the Computer Science building and apply for an account - which wasn't even personalized. It was a string of letters, the @ symbol, and a domain name having nothing resembling anything - it a "MUSIC" account - Multi University Shared Internet Computing (or something close to that).
I wrote letters. Actual handwritten letters. And then I attached them to a carrier pigeon, went and beat my laundry against a rock and took a steam operated trolley to Chapter Meeting. |
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