This document presents concerns from teachers and administrators over the years about students' dependence on various writing and calculating technologies as they were introduced, from slate boards to paper, ink, pens, pencils, calculators, and now computers. With each new technology, critics argued students were losing important life skills and the virtues of thrift, and would not be properly prepared for the business world, though the concluding statement acknowledges that technologies continue to evolve to make our lives easier despite inevitable complaints.
2. "Students today can’t prepare bark to calculate
their problems. They depend upon their slates
which are more expensive. What will they do
when their slate is dropped and it breaks? They
will be unable to write.
-Teachers Conference, 1703
3. "Students today depend
upon paper too much. They
don’t know how to write on
slate without getting chalk
dust all over themselves.
They can’t clean a slate
properly. What will they do
when they run out of
paper?"
-Principal’s
Association, 1815
4. "Students depend too much on
ink. They don’t know how to use
a pen knife to sharpen a pencil.
Pen and ink will never replace
the pencil."
-National Association of
Teachers, 1907
5. "Students today depend upon store bought
ink. They don’t know how to make their
own. When they run out they will be
unable to write words or ciphers until their
next trip to the settlement. This is a sad
commentary on modern education.
-The Rural Teacher, 1929
6. "Students today depend upon these
expensive fountain pins. They can no longer
write with a straight pen and nib (not to
mention sharpening their own quills). We
parents must not allow them to wallow in
such luxury to the detriment of learning
how to cope in the real business world,
which is not so extravagant."
-PTA Gazette, 1941
7. "Ball point pens will be the ruin of
education in our country. Students use
these devices and then throw them away.
The virtues of thrift and frugality are being
discarded. Business and banks will never
allow such expensive luxuries."
-The Federal Teacher, 1950
9. Today we still use pens, pencils and
calculators. Now we have computers which
make our lives even easier and I’m sure
that no matter what changes happen in the
future someone will complain about it.