With its never-ending reach to billions of people‚ it is really necessary for social media to be beneficial for the population. Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid” and Johnson’s “Watching TV Makes You Smarter” focus on how media have changed the way in which we learn and grow as individuals in today’s world. They express how television and Google can have an impact on an individual to such an extent which was previously unimaginable. Although both of these writers have a different perspective
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this is stupid. fjfdkals;cdsakl;fndkslcmd/ fd a a f ds f as fds af dsaf ds afd saf dsa fds fdsafdsaf dsa fdsa fd saf dsf ds fds f dsaf dsaf dsa fds af ds vf h trh tyh y h yh5 6 5dfjkllllllllllllllllllllll;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Personal Responsibility Albertis McCray Gen Ed 200 10/28/2011 John Bachofer III Personal Responsibility Essay
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Educational Reform In chapter five “Stupid Schools” of John Stossel ’s book Myths‚ Lies‚ and Downright Stupidity we get a clear and direct view of Stossel ’s view of the American Education system. It ’s apparent from the beginning that in the authors opinion we ’re doing things wrong‚ American education is a "government monopoly". Stossel states several interesting "myths" such as American public schools level the playing field‚ all high school students can read‚ and public schools are underfunded
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Rhetorical Analysis of Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid? We are at a time where technology is widespread; it has become a part of our everyday life leading to advantages and disadvantages and technology currently has become the most important topic to discuss and everyone has developed their own unique opinion. In Nicholas Carr’s article published in 2008‚ “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”‚ he argues that as technology progresses people’s mentality changes. Carr is effective in his argument
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In his essay‚ Is Google Making Us Stupid? ‚ Nicholas Carr argues‚ that although the Internet has allowed us a vast vortex of knowledge‚ that it is not only changing the way that we consume information‚ but fundamentally rewiring our brains to change the way we think. Carr argues‚ that the pervasive use of search engines such as Google hampers our ability for the deep and concentrating reading central pertinent to critical thought. Our over reliance on such technologies‚ Carr claims‚ has taken over
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"Why are you so stupid?" "What do you mean stupid?" "You’re just a stupid boy." "I’m a MAN." More difficult than the classes‚ more difficult than the pressure of college and responsibilities is the constant nagging of my female peers. In our school‚ they are the dominant sex and feminism can be felt from miles around. Females control our school‚ and there is no way of getting around it. The common myth that women are inferior to men is completely and utterly wrong. Ever since I began
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In Today’s time‚ people have come to realization that advancement with the new technologies have brought tremendous change that is convenient to people. Nicholas Carr writes in his work “Is Google Making Us Stupid” the ways that these new technologies‚ particularly the internet is not only damaging this generation but it will also effect the generations to come. Carr writes about the atmosphere of a present universal debate referring to assumptions that the Internet has started to reform our world
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Nicholas Carr‚ based on his essay‚ “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” would disagree with Steven Pinker’s “Mind Over Mass Media.” Pinker believes that technology is the only thing that keeps us smart in a society level by making it easier to be informed about everything‚ while Carr believes that it affects our critical thinking ability because having access to so much information makes us skim through the reading‚ so even though we are reading many things‚ it does not mean we are actually holding on to
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his or her parents would do when they were young‚ he or she will pull out his or her smartphone and “google” it. Thanks to Google and all other information technology providers‚ the information and knowledge in this world are closer to the netizens than any other time in the history. In Nicholas Carr’s article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”‚ more than acknowledging the great opportunities which Google has brought to him‚ Carr brings up his own concern that “the Net …is chipping away [his] capacity for
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in the way he or she processes information so that the passages he or she reads are given cursory attention for the sake of efficiency. There are many consequences to this type of thinking. For instance‚ as Nicholas Carr‚ the writer of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?‚” states‚ readers are more likely to put speed and practicality above forming connections within the text‚ which “may be weakening [their] capacity for the kind of deep reading that emerged when an earlier technology‚ the printing press‚
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