Bill Gates and Steve Jobs raised their kids tech-free — and it
should've been a red flag
A new book suggests the signs may have been clear a decade ago,
based on the attitudes of Silicon Valley elite, that smartphone use should be
regulated.
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Interviews with Bill Gates,
Steve Jobs, and other tech elites consistently reveal that Silicon Valley
parents are strict about technology use.
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A new book suggests the signs
may have been clear years ago that smartphone use should be regulated.
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There may be a way to integrate
tech into the classroom, however, that avoids its harmful effects.
Psychologists are quickly learning how dangerous smartphones can be for teenage brains.
Research has found that an eighth-grader's risk for
depression jumps 27% when he or she frequently uses social
media. Kids who use their phones for at least three hours a day are much more
likely to be suicidal. And recent research has found the teen suicide rate in
the US now eclipses the homicide rate, with smartphones
as the driving force.
But the writing about smartphone risk may have been on the wall
for roughly a decade, according to educators Joe Clement and Matt Miles,
coauthors of the recent book " target="_blank"Screen Schooled: Two Veteran
Teachers Expose How Technology Overuse is Making Our Kids Dumber."
It should be telling, Clement and Miles argue, that the two biggest
tech figures in recent history — Bill Gates and Steve Jobs — seldom let their
kids play with the very products they helped create.
"What is it these wealthy tech executives know about their
own products that their consumers don't?" the authors wrote. The answer,
according to a growing body of evidence, is the addictive power of digital
technology.
'We limit how much technology our kids use at
home'
In 2007, Gates, the former CEO of Microsoft, implemented a cap on
screen time when his daughter started developing an unhealthy attachment to a
video game. He also didn't let his kids get cell phones until they turned 14.
(Today, the average age for
a child getting their first phone is 10.)
Jobs, who was the CEO of Apple until his death in 2012, revealed in a 2011 New York
Times interview that he prohibited his kids from using the
newly-released iPad. "We limit how much technology
our kids use at home," Jobs told reporter
In "Screen Schooled," Clement and Miles make the case
that wealthy Silicon Valley parents seem to grasp the addictive powers of
smartphones, tablets, and computers more than the general public does — despite
the fact that these parents often make a living by creating and investing in
that technology.
"It's interesting to think that in a modern public school,
where kids are being required to use electronic devices like iPads," the
authors wrote, "Steve Jobs's kids would be some of the only kids opted
out."
Jobs' children have finished school, so it's impossible to know
how the late Apple cofounder would have responded to education technology, or
"edtech." But Clement and Miles suggest that if Jobs' kids had
attended the average US school today, they'd have used tech in the classroom
far more than they did at home while growing up.
That's at the average school at least, according to the coauthors.
A number of specialty Silicon Valley schools, such as the Waldorf School, are
noticeably low-tech. They use chalkboards and No. 2 pencils. Instead of
learning how to code, kids are taught the soft skills of cooperation and
respect. At Brightworks School, kids learn creativity by
building things and attending classes in treehouses.
Edtech won't be a 'cure all'
If there is any concession Gates has made on technology, it's in
the benefits it offers students in certain educational settings. In the years
since Gates implemented his household policy, the billionaire philanthropist
has taken a keen interest in personalized education, an approach that uses
electronic devices to help tailor lesson plans for each student.
In a recent blog post, Gates
celebrated Summit Sierra, a Seattle-based school that takes students' personal
goals — like getting into a specific college — and devises a path to get there.
Teachers in personalized learning settings take on more of a coaching role,
helping to nudge students back on track when they get stuck or distracted.
Technology in these cases is being used as specifically as
possible — and in ways Gates recognizes as useful for a student's development,
not as entertainment.
"Personalized
learning won't be a cure-all," he wrote. But Gates said he's "hopeful
that this approach could help many more young people make the most of their
talents.
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