Week 6

Techno Gap

As laptops have become ubiquitous over the past few decades, they have become a staple in the school system. From computer classes to Chromebooks, most students are familiarized with these from an early age. The expectation has been that this will prepare us for college and work, but is that really what’s happening?

There is something missing as students enter higher education. Skills that were once essential to using a computer, now are unknown to the average young person. I don’t entirely know where the gap comes from, whether it’s teachers and professors expecting a certain level of understanding or if we all now use certain technology while assuming we don’t need to understand why it works a certain way.

Technology is ever changing and it seems that gaps grow faster than ever. While my brother met his wife on MySpace, I wouldn’t even begin to understand the basic functions of the website; But vice-versa, he has no idea how Instagram works and I’ve been an active user for most of my teen years and young adulthood. One thing I do know that I don’t know is what the back-end of Instagram does. I don’t know why a sticker does what it does, I just know if I click it I can add a song 🙂

There is a fundamental misunderstanding between creating the action and what causes the action. But it’s also not that easy to figure out. I already don’t feel like a competent user of most technology, so why would I benefit from digging in to understand how easy-to-use apps function?

Yes, obviously it’s capitalism. By allowing companies to prioritize comfort and ease, we lose the connection to the act of creation. Half of my high-school era papers no longer exist because I either didn’t know how to save them correctly or opening them on my computer requires twenty minutes of downloading to open them in the same app I created them in.

Kleenex and Google, no longer pronouns but common nouns and verbs, mirror the change we see as tech becomes ubiquitous. Though genericide can have negative consequences, what comes before seems to be a monopolization of the space, designating any object within a certain likeness to the name of the most popular version.

What happens when all we know how to do is use PowerPoint? The barrier to entry for any other slide show program seems too heavy, so why leave? Then PowerPoint will lose favor and the next tech will come along, unable to open any other slide show leaving years of work to file death in the buried recesses of your computer File Explorer.

My own experience seems particularly limited, though some may share the sentiment. I grew up in the transitional era. My sisters had flip-phones but I got a smart-phone when I turned 13. My family had a computer room but now we all have individual laptops, and most have desktops, too. My mom was one of those that berated the very existence of a smart-phone until thrust upon her by the expectations of the technologically advanced. I did not have my own computer until college. The latest gaming system I used until a few years ago was…a WII. Somehow both tech literate and beyond saving for the most basic of computer skills.

The gap for those of us who were given only the most restricted access to tech is so large. There is already a misunderstanding for newer generations on the basic functions of computers, but it seems utterly insurmountable to some of us. So what does it look like to become one of the few tech competent?


Posted

in

by

Tags:

Comments

3 responses to “Week 6”

  1. li_05 Avatar
    li_05

    I really like the way you organize your article! The text and formatting are very nice but also add a great personal touch! As well as the quote formatting, it’s nice to see some creativity with the website!
    I really related to your section about “the gap”. I think that i also fall into that weird specific window where we have a family computer but my mom also had her own laptop for work, but that was it’s own very special thing. My brother got his first phone when he was already in high school and it was an old blackberry, whereas I had my first phone same age but it was an iPhone and it seemed like it was almost necessary to have for school. However, I am not tech savvy at all. I don’t know anything outside of how to function my devices and that’s about it. It’s so funny.

  2. LKSOC1004 Avatar
    LKSOC1004

    I will say this: only being able to use technology through a user interface without understanding how the technology actually works is not a personal failure. These are things that others are supposed to teach us, and the people responsible for teaching us failed to do so. They were also likely failed. I think this is certainly on purpose. While it isn’t illegal or anything to research how these various technologies work, it isn’t incentivized. Someone has to step in and let you know that you have knowledge gap for you to know what to even research. The point is that the recognition that one has to try to develop skills at these things is the best we can do because the intervention that pushes one to learn these things comes far too late by design, if even at all.

  3. tacobell-CEO Avatar
    tacobell-CEO

    It has been really interesting to see the technological gaps between classmates throughout this class. I would consider myself to be slightly above average when it comes to technology. I think in today’s world it is much less about having knowledge than knowing how to Google whatever issue you are having. I found that a lot of the people in class who know more about computers are people that play video games. A lot of my learning about how computers work has stemmed from me learning to use mods in the Sims games. I remember learning how to download and install games on the family computer when I was a kid. I have a friend who didn’t have a phone until she was 16, and she knows a lot less than I do. I think for our age group, it is so much about what your parents gave you access to.

Leave a Reply