![]() ![]() The question is at what cost? Should students be encouraged to use the portable over a more complicated device? Is it an ‘everything now’ cloud computing that we should aspire to? As I hold my old Nexus phone, I wonder what is it we actually need verses want? What next, phones inserted under our skin? As Douglas Rushkoff suggests, “What makes a phone great is not how new it is, but how long it lasts.” Networked digital information technology has become the dominant mode through which we experience the everyday. To return to Adam Greenfield, he argues that rather than being flexible and aware of our impact, we have bought into an ethos of efficiency of everyday existence. ![]() The thing I can least afford is to get things working so perfectly that I don’t notice what’s changing in the environment anymore. We are often willing to talk about moonshots and wicked problems unwilling to let go of certain assumptions and certifications.Ĭlay Shirky suggests that workflows need to be a little frustrating: Too often the focus of mobile technology in education is on cognition and communicative, rather than the critical and constructive. Critical – the analysis of assumptions behind literacy practises.Creative – this involves doing new things in new ways that somehow add value.Confident – the connecting of the dots and capitalising on different possibilities.Communicative – sharing and engaging within the various cultural norms.Constructive – the appropriate use of digital tools to enable social actions.Cognitive – the ability to use computational thinking in order to work through problems.Cultural – the expectations and behaviours associated with different environments, both online and off.Rather than defining it as a thing in itself, Belshaw discusses eight different elements that come to play in different contexts and situations: Here I am reminded of Doug Belshaw’s work on digital literacies. ![]() Instead I am striving for more critical reflection. I am not necessarily arguing we should ‘ban’ smartphones in schools as it often feels like such decisions are sometimes made for the wrong reasons, whether it be liability or control. This is our life now: strongly shaped by the detailed design of the smartphone handset by its precise manifest of sensors, actuators, processors and antennae by the protocols that govern its connection to the various networks around us by the user interface conventions that guide our interaction with its applications and services and by the strategies and business models adopted by the enterprises that produce them. ![]() This is something Adam Greenfield captures in his book Radical Technologies: I wonder about the inherent design and consequence of smartphone use? I wonder about those places involved in the production? I wonder about the ethics involved? Yet I am left feeling something is still missing in the discussion. When I think of my own habits, my writing and reading often starts with my phone, whether it be flicking through my feed reader or jotting down a few notes. There is no doubting that the smartphone has simplified so many actions and activities. This particular change is captured by Vala Afshar in the form of emojis: In particular, I think the idea of ‘better’ is problematic and instead argue for difference. My initial response was a little circumspect. If we didn’t have them … what would the world look like … Can we definitively say ‘better’ ?įor me, this is such an intriguing question. John Philpin recently wrote a response to a post from John Harris I shared discussing the destructive nature of mobile phones. This then is a response to my reading of James Bridle’s book The New Dark Age and the place of the future of the smartphone. However, it grew and grew, so I have split it up. This post started as a response to a possible future of technology. ![]()
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