Cellphones, Ipods, and PSPs
In every generation, there is always an electronic bane that tempts students away from studies. In my time, it was the family computer. This time, it’s a lethal combination of phones, music players and game consoles.
You see, back then, the temptation seems to be a very easy one to deal with. Family computers, because they only have a single function (for gaming) and because they used to cost a fortune, could only be afforded by the more well off families. Aside from this, parents have more control as to when they can be used because they serve no other purpose but for playing games. Before, most parents bring them out only during weekends or vacations when they don’t have to compete against studies.
Today, however, temptations are a million times more difficult to fight against for a variety of reasons. Cellular phones, for example, have become quite an integral part not just of everyday communications but also of everyday things. From talking to others, to finding directions when lost, and even to providing emergency light in the absence of a flashlight, people depend on their cellular phones. Even students from as early as elementary levels, are provided with cellular phones by their moms and dads.
Music players, another form of temptation in this age of rhythm and sound, have taken the hearts of adolescent generations by providing an instant escape from everyday worries. Whenever, they need to relax, or sometimes even to focus or drown out the noise around them, they turn on their music players to listen to music inside the classroom, during breaks or anywhere else where they feel like it.
Lastly, game consoles such as PSPs, just like their predecessors, are gaming units. But unlike the family computers, PSPs serve a variety of other functions. They can play music, movies, and can even be used to surf the internet wirelessly. They’re the electronic version of Swiss Army knives, so to speak, nice to have, but not essential.
Anyway, regardless of generation and sophistication, the fact is these electronic wonders just like their ancestors, no matter how many good functions they have, will always remain a distraction for students. Cellular phones, music players, and game consoles require attention and that alone is enough to consider them a threat to our children’s studies.
I, for one, will try my best to keep Mateo from all these temptations until such time that he is able to prove to me that he’s responsible enough to bear the burden of these gadgets without sacrificing his studies, health or behavior. It is then and only until then, that he will ever be allowed to possess any cellular phone, Ipod or PSP.
i agree with you completely!
Comment by eog — February 4, 2008 @ 6:53 pm
That’s true, Sir Ramil. No offense but most students, when they get tempted with these things, they are “distracted”. With just a single temptation, things may get worse. For example, a guy saw a PSP. He wants to buy it and told everything to his mother. His mother said no. He locked up himself in his room, not eating or drinking and even not studying! It can spoil people…^_^
Comment by Alren Desoyo — February 22, 2008 @ 5:46 am