One of my more pretentious students made this comment in class today:
"In just a few years, most old people won't matter because we're growing up in the Information Age. We'll know more accurate information about more subjects than they could ever imagine."
It's said that we're living in this so called Information Age because of the easy access to the internet. One can essentially read a plethora of sources on any given subject at any given time. Whether or not those sources are peer reviewed is unbeknownst to the reader.
So I'm wondering if we're actually performing more harm to our young minds than good.
How many times have you seen people - especially my age and younger - on the internet use wrong information?
How often have you been in an argument on a message board and had to correct someone?
I generally consider this message board one of the more educated boards around including non-sports boards, so I do value the opinions here
A few examples:
Reddit - You go to its Politics page and their Atheism page, and it's littered with misinformation. Specious arguments abound. Tremendous arrogance reigns.
I've seen some good arguments for atheism. They aren't found on Reddit's page, and there are 646,000+ subscribers following every fallacy posted.
The autodidacts of message boards - Maybe I've perused too many message boards in my life, but there seems to be an ever growing number of self-taught know-it-alls that think they're above the college educated simple folk.
Their free-for-all learning methods allow them to digest more pertinent information, they say. I've seen a lack of guidance as their main fault, but often, their Dunning-Kruger brains lack the ability to see how wrong they are.
So if a majority of people see the internet as a better source of education while missing the fact that internet is in fact not a better source for education, what happens?