Published September 25, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Technology Tension in Schools: Addressing the Complex Impacts of Digital Advances on Teaching, Learning, and Wellbeing

Description

Although classroom technology provides advantages such as accessibility, efficiency, and engagement, numerous educational institutions encounter challenges in mitigating its unintended consequences on learning, development, and overall well-being. Research indicates that more than half of students acknowledge that technology interferes with their academic performance, with disparities in the extent of these effects across different income brackets. Commercial interests also infiltrate the classroom through advertisements, data collection, and sponsored educational resources. Nevertheless, the policy responses haven't kept pace with the rapid ascent of technology in the academic world. The diverse smartphone bans implemented in 25% of nations demonstrate a tendency towards reactive speculation rather than logical reasoning. Insufficient data substantiates the efficacy of such limitations, and they fail to consider possible emergency applications. Concurrently, developing technologies introduce novel hazards. Chatbot platforms facilitate academic dishonesty in more than 19% of homework assignments and 20% of essays, therefore diminishing the motivation to learn. The impact of deepfake media on students is evident from the notable surge in nonconsensual consumption of fake pornography. A too zealous automation of instruction poses the risk of undermining pedagogy by removing human oversight. Although intimidating, these intricate problems require meticulous resolutions, far from apprehension. Privacy protections, impact evaluations, teacher training, and ethical tech curricula can help maximize benefits and develop students’ critical faculties. Overall coordination is needed between innovators, schools, families, and governing bodies. With care, foresight, and cooperation, technology’s gifts may outweigh its harms for empowering students' futures. But a deliberate, evidence-based approach is necessary for governance. If decision-makers act urgently but undogmatically, accounting for unique local contexts, technology tensions can give way to safer adoption and wiser policy.

 

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