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Internet on the yellow bus? OMG, it’s a bad idea

By | February 15, 2010, 4:00 AM PST

On Friday The New York Times ran an A1 article, Wi-Fi Turns Rowdy Bus Into Rolling Study Hall, about a pioneering effort in Vail, Ariz., to give students with long commutes a break from the bullying and teasing that can happen among teenagers on bus rides and to allow them to work on homework (or Facebook work). The solution: Install a mobile Internet router (marketed by Autonet Mobile) to the frame of the bus.

The article says Karen Cator, director of education technology at the federal Department of Education, said the buses were part of a wider effort to use technology to extend learning beyond classroom walls and the six-hour school day.

I don’t want to make this an I-walked-a-mile-in-the-snow-when-I-was-a-kid story (that was just last week, here in Washington), and I don’t want to sound like an old fogey, but what looked like a good idea on first glance didn’t sit well as I continued reading. I’m all about connectivity and access in the right environments. But the fact is that the average American already spends an average of 8.5 hours a day in front of some sort of screen (according to a study last year from the Council for Research Excellence). Studies show a connection between screen time and increased symptoms of ADHD (see my post in December about computer over-usage).

I’m not a fan of WiFi on jets either (kind of ruins the feeling of escape, where all I can do is dive into a good book) but this bothers me more. School bus-riding-aged kids are still highly impressionable. They are forming habits, learning how to interact, making friends and figuring out the best way to respond when they are teased. (Isn’t being teased at some point just part of being 13?) How can they fully develop these interpersonal skills if they’re consumed with their keyboards? If the behavior on the bus is so disruptive to the driver and so harmful to the students, aren’t there other ways to deal with it besides directing them to what is arguably an electronic babysitter? (This reminds me of another recent Times article about the ban on Dungeons & Dragons by the Waupun Correctional Institution in Wisconsin because the prison’s gang specialist said it could lead to fantasies about escape. Seriously? There wasn’t a way to handle this other than taking away one of the few—or only–pleasures the inmates might have had while locked up?)

When I went back to the school bus article online, I found 200 comments, largely reflecting my own feelings about this “advancement.” There were some supporters of the Internet bus, but the overall message was loud and clear: This is nuts. Here’s a sampling:

“Great. Another opportunity for personal interaction eliminated.”
-Dirckus, Nantucket

“We’re creating an autistic society. Why not just replace them with robots? Much less trouble.”
-yuckydo, New York City

“Why do they need to go to school? Why not just do their lessons from their rooms? Then they can play online sports against each other after school.”
-Steve, Westchester

“The school bus used to be a cauldron of interactive, interpersonal socialization, a learning laboratory for youngsters to figure out how to get along with the rest of humanity. I fear for the isolated, insular robot-beings of the future…”
-Surly and Old, Virginia

“Rambunctious teenagers? Give them internet, video games, drugs, anything to prevent that type of normal behavior!!”
-Raffi, LA

“Am I the only one who thinks this is sad? Goofing off and being annoying is part of being a teenager. Now they are all just IMing each other like they do everywhere else.”
-Jen, Chicago

And the comment that reflected my very first thought about using a computer on the yellow bus:

“Don’t the kids get carsick looking at a screen?”
-engineergirl, Washington, DC

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Melanie D.G. Kaplan

About Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a contributing writer for SmartPlanet.

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Contributing Writer

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a regular contributor to The Washington Post and WebMD and has written for The New York Times, National Geographic Traveler and People. She holds degrees from Syracuse University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She is based in Washington, D.C.

Follow her on Twitter.

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

In addition to working as a journalist, Melanie keeps the dog food fund flush with occasional consulting jobs. In the unusual event that her writing mentions a company or organization for which she has provided editorial services, she will disclose that fact. She will do the same should she cover any companies in which she holds investments.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Internet on the yellow bus? OMG, it's a bad idea
Having internet on the bus will not make kids use it 100% of the time, it'll be a tool, just like their phones with IM. Blaming the gun for dead people is the same. Why don't you just compliment on educating your children instead of relying on schools to do that?
Plus, honestly, having computers will eventually make schools at least partially obsolete. You MUST accept change and evolve with it, don't just throw everyone who thinks differently into the fire, maybe the world is actually spherical and spins around the sun.
(No, I don't have kids, I'm just a young engineer)
Posted by 8007342
15th Feb 2010
0 Votes
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Oh, c'mon
Kids aren't on buses for long.

Offering them education instead of having them play "Lord of the
Flies" is a good thing, not a bad thing.

It's much better than putting a TV in front of the bus. That's just
one channel. The Internet is every channel.

Also, this particular school gives out netbooks to its kids. Not
every school is like that. At most public schools kids don't take PCs
to school because they could be dropped or stolen.

So these kids are pretty extraordinary to start with. Letting them
get a jump on homework while they're on the way home also means they
might have more free time when they get there. It doesn't mean
they're going to be 24x7 drudges or (God forbid) grow up to be
Chinese.
Posted by DanaBlankenhorn
15th Feb 2010
0 Votes
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Mobile internet will soon be most everywhere
Putting a WiFi on the bus won't change that.

The kids will soon be surfing whether we do it ot not.

But here's something. What if the WiFi on the bus, the easiest and most reliable of all connections, was also filterred the way a scholl filters its network access?
Posted by mheartwood
16th Feb 2010
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RE: Internet on the yellow bus? OMG, it's a bad idea
Uh DanaBlankenhorn, racist much? The Chinese have Gangs, cheaters, druggies, etc just like our country. I'm not sure when being Asian meant that you are smarter than the rest of the world but from my experience they just have a better work ethic. I'm not sure I want my son to kill himself if is disgraces himself or his family, life is more important than that.

Giving today's kids won't necessarily make them smarter or work harder, or even make them do their homework. When I was on the bus I either slept (morning), or did my homework. I didn?t need a computer.

Being behind a computer 9+ a day I can definitely catch some ADD tendencies. But I?m aware of it and I do things to counteract it. Let's not forget that the internet is the single greatest invention of the century and has and continues to do extremely good things.

Verdict: I think either way is fine. As we get more and more connected it will be inevitable to get away from tech in schools. There will still be a need/desire for sports, in person social interaction, school dances, etc. I don?t see us being robots any time soon.

J. Micheal
Posted by McLovin83
Updated - 1st Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: Internet on the yellow bus? OMG, it's a bad idea
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Posted by vipsexshop
14th Apr 2011
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Internet on the yellow bus? OMG, it's a bad idea
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Posted by osoz
30th Apr 2011
0 Votes
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Giving today's
Giving today's kids won't necessarily make them smarter or work harder, or even make them do their homework. W caiu na nethen I was on the bus I either slept (morning), or did my homework. I didn?t need a computer.
Posted by thomasjeff
17th Sep 2011
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