NYT Executive Tweets: Using Twitter Makes You Stupid
by Alex Alvarez
My father, who was trained in engineering at M.I.T. in the slide-rule era, often lamented the way the pocket calculator, for all its convenience, diminished my generation’s math skills. Many of us have discovered that navigating by G.P.S. has undermined our mastery of city streets and perhaps even impaired our innate sense of direction. Typing pretty much killed penmanship. Twitter and YouTube are nibbling away at our attention spans. And what little memory we had not already surrendered to Gutenberg we have relinquished to Google. Why remember what you can look up in seconds?Robert Bjork, who studies memory and learning at U.C.L.A., has noticed that even very smart students, conversant in the Excel spreadsheet, don’t pick up patterns in data that would be evident if they had not let the program do so much of the work.
Keller isn’t too convinced that many of today’s social media outlets are “social” so much as noisy distractions keeping us from spending time on other pursuits, like our work and one another. Although a virtual fireplace isn’t too bad of a place in front of which to read your digital subscription to the New York Times.
Of course, a story on social media written by the NYT’s executive editor is going to garner quite a bit of attention on – You guessed it! – Twitter. Here’s what some in the media are saying about Keller’s op-ed piece:
Anthony De Rosa, of Reuters and Neighborhoodr
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