• conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I have no issue with it being in a locker. I have an issue with it being in a classroom.

    Let’s be real for a minute. Most employers can’t realistically ban adults from having personal cell phones on them, so it’s just a tolerated intrusion, but the vast majority of adults can’t be trusted to use their phones responsibly when they should be being productive. Kids are much worse, and they also desperately need the enforced long focus sessions without the distraction of cell phones in order to have their brains develop properly. As vulnerable as adults are to the extremely powerful habit-forming nature of modern technology, kids are even more exposed, because their brains are more adaptable and because they don’t have the same body of work to fall back on.

    • FlickOfTheBean@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Ahhh this is a case of I misread one of your posts it seems.

      Yeah your stance seems reasonable enough to me with that clarification.

      I don’t really know about the long focus sessions being necessary for proper brain development (social conditioning seems to be more the point of that) but I’m not an expert here, so I am not going to trust my gut on this one. (In the effort of reigning in my pedantism, I’m not going to ask the definition of proper development either lol)

      In any case, ty for the conversation!

      • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        It’s not that their brain explodes or anything.

        But focus and attention span are skills that need to be practiced to be developed. If you never get that practice, the scope of problems you’re able to solve shrinks substantially, because a lot of big problems need sustained attention to make a real dent in. Coming in from a lateral angle with ideas from other areas are great, and a lot of problems are solved that way, but you need to be immersed in the problem space at some point before you get that stroke of insight.

        You need to be able to sustain attention, though, and that takes practice.