A writer named David Rusak sums up the case that social media is increasingly taking over the way we communicate. He sais that despite the fact that there is a comment field, a retweet button an no formal system logging the repetitions there are lots of social media users who tries to avoid commenting on the said post instead they cast votes for someone else’s. And he thinks it shows that an ongoing shift in the way online communication is done. And like button has now allowed users to go away with much commenting by simply just hitting the like button. This is not to say that every Facebook friend’s who often use like button replaces what would have been deep and personal if it was a phone chat or letter in the old days. But without a doubt this like button does what it‘s supposed to do, but not particularly rich comments and saving the comments box for more useful expressions.
Moving on the theme of the last sentence Rusak sums up the implications of Facebook’s replacement of the become a fdan mechanism with the like button to corporations, celebrities and product brand names. By doing this so, Facebookers were replaced with much lower-commitment sense of declaring that you actually like it. and because users are used to like-ing their friends posts and photos it gives them the feeling that it’s jyst the same for them to like movies, brands, etc. Since the students come form a social context that is bombarded by social media, with the saying “if you can’t beat them joint them”. That is why some of the academy have already started calling teachers and professors to begin using the technology so that they can be with the same level of their students and to understand them better I see an increasing passivity as one potential result of liking. One never has to justify a like unless challenge about it. Hence challenges to what one likes are going to be rare.
The Essay on Social anxiety increase in children due to social networking/media
Do you remember back when kids had sleepovers or spent summer in the tree houses or forts or any other adventures they would come up with? They would hang out and interact with each other. Now days you hardly ever see them leave their house, and for most, leave their bedroom. Kids these days spend more time in front of the T.V. or computer watching shows, playing video games, or chatting with ...
After all, liking something is just expressing a preference. The problem with this is that all preference isn’t as obviously subjective as the chocolate vs. vanilla. But the model of liking admits of no-exceptions. In this the like button mentality comports well with general trend towards relativism in western culture over the past fifty years or so. Where we the impact of this cultural drift inside the classroom is the increasing inability of the students to give supports for the side which they took, it maybe shown in classroom conversation, in papers or in presentation. Have you experienced giving students an argument where they can’t or didn’t support their answers?.
Answers like this: “I think X because X is what I think and X seems right to me. Now one can say that general decline in public education is to blame for producing college students who cannot put together the elements of an argument. Students arrive in classrooms practiced only in declaring preferences and believing that they are doing what is needed for thinking. For my part I’ve found that the “if you can’t beat them join them hasn’t worked. Term after term of experimenting with using facebook, and allowing laptops and going easy on cell phones , this term there will be changes.