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Farenheit 451, By Ray Bradbury

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A 2017 study conducted by Regis College showed that young adults aged 19–32 years found that people with higher social media use were more than three times as likely to feel socially isolated than those who did not use social media as often, so what could this mean for society if technology keeps advancing? In the novel “ relentlessly violent” written by Ray Bradbury, society has been overcome with technology obsession and passive activities. These issues lead to a lot of problems in society’s education system and the learning advancements of the new generation. In the novel, school is not of importance, school has become just another passive activity and is teaching just about the surface level of knowledge. Ray Bradbury might of been trying to show …show more content…

In this society, there are no books at home, and they will not have access to books so there’s no reinforcing the student knowledge. Captain Beatty explained how education undoes what school teaches. “The home environment can undo a lot you try to do at school” (Bradbury 75). This matters because schools try to teach the kids, but their home environment is full of screens and watching is a passive activity in which they aren’t learning. Overall, this society has ruined the education system because of the lack of education in homes and schools. In the novel, technology is used at school to distract from real learning. In this society school is not a reliable source of learning, it is preparing their students for the bare minimum which their not even learning. These students are learning an unreliable education which needs to be more for them to become smarter and more successful. “School is shortened, discipline relaxed, philosophies, histories dropped, languages dropped, English and spelling gradually neglected, finally almost completely ignored. Life is immediate, the job counts, and pleasure lies all about after

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