An example is being on the phone with someone and trying to email at the same time. He say that you lose concentration and the person on the other end of the phone with be able to tell. Hallowell quotes, “You cannot divide your attention like that. It’s a big illusion. You can shift back forth” (Tugend 715).
In the chapter “Growing up tethered”, a chapter from the book ‘Alone Together’, written by Sherry Turkle is a chapter that talks about the how modern society has changed because of cell phones more specifically young teens. In this chapter, the author approaches her argument by using the rhetorical appeal. In the first couple of pages, the author uses ethos for her argument. Turkle is using ethos by showing her values, morals, and credibility to the topic. She identifies the problem between children, parents, and cells phones which shows the readers that she has a good judgment.
In her essay, Multitasking or Mass ADD, Ellen Goodman discusses how people that have busy life 's "believe that multitasking makes them more efficient and successful". She explains that she is a terrible multitasker and believes that her "inability to simultaneously YouTube and IM make her a technological dinosaur". In her essay, Goodman mentions Clifford Nass ' research. Clifford Nass does a research experiment that tests high and low-level multitaskers. Nass believes that "we are breeding generations of kids whose ability to pay attention may be destroyed".
Verna von Pfetten acknowledges in the article “Read This Story Without Distraction (Can You?),” that monotasking has its benefits although the environment has more to do with focusing than one might think. Everyone knows “multitasking” doesn’t actually exist. The brain cannot multitask. Instead, it switches from one task to another, meeting the demands of only one at a time. There is a cost associated with this switch, resulting in brain power being eaten away causing productivity to slip.
Brief Essay 1 McKenna Kendrick English, Writing, & Literature, Blue Mountain Community College Wiring 122 Professor Berlie January 25, 2023 Word count with bibliography: ; word count without bibliography: The art of rhetoric is hard to master. Many spend decades developing their skills and the various techniques available to persuade an audience. Lauren Shinozuka wrote an essay entitled The Dangers of Digital Distractedness.
Theodore "Ted" Bundy began life as his mother 's clandestine shame. Eleanor Cowell was twenty-two years old and single when she had her first son Theodore, which outraged her deeply spiritual and devout parents. She gave birth to Ted Bundy at a home for single mothers in Vermont and then later brought her son to reside with her parents in Philadelphia ("More Than Horror, Serial Killer, biography, books, dvd," n.d.). To cover the fact that he was a bastard, Bundy was raised as the assumed son of his grandparents and was told that his mother was his sister. Eleanor relocated with Ted to Tacoma, Washington, a couple of years later.
Hovhan refers to the internet as “electronic cocaine” which she uses to support her research and reasoning behind why multitasking causes alterations to neurological productivity pathways. As an internet user and multitasker myself, I felt the need to connect the research of these three sources. Although they all argue that internet multitasking is negative and has hindering implications, they each provide different unique evidence to highlight their claim. Through the culmination of these articles, it becomes clear that internet multitasking not only lowers our productivity, but also hurts our brains on a neurological level. Productivity research that utilizes systematic benchmark tests, is an easier way to measure the consequences of multitasking as brain scans are not needed to show results.
Liz Marks Skyler Woods 5th hour for teens distracted driving is the number one death. Liz Marks is a victim of this. when Liz Marks was a victim of this she was 17, it was April 2012. She was one of the nine people that die a day from distracted driving. Liz was blind in her right eye.
Learning is fun, but it is also hard work. It’s so extraordinarily well documented as to be almost a truism at this point, but multitasking and particularly technology (e.g., cell phones, email) can make the deep concentration needed for real learning difficult or impossible. Set aside dedicated time for learning and minimize interruptions. When you read, find a quiet place, and leave your phone behind. If you’re taking a class or participating in a reading group, take handwritten notes, which improve retention and understanding, and leave laptops, mobiles devices, and other disrupting technologies in your car or bag far out of reach.
Ms, Kuzma presented the Attorney General’s position on human trafficking. The AGs office defines sex and labor trafficking as when traffickers use force, fraud, or coercion to control other people for the purpose of engaging in commercial sex or forcing them to provide labor services against their will. The AGs office is very passionate about this issue and was an influential member of the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) announced to focus of their efforts on ending human trafficking across the United States back in 2011. In the NAAGs efforts they created the Pillars of Hope: • Pillar 1) Making the Case: Gather stat-specific data on human trafficking and create a database that assists local authorities with identifying human
This week in Composition II, we evaluated an article about the effects of multitasking. The article, Multitasking Can Make You Lose…Um…Focus, written by Alina Tugend was published in the New York Times in 2008, and contemplates the positive and negative aspects of multitasking. Although multitasking is essential in 21st century life, studies have shown that multitasking can make you less effective. In Chapter 7, we have looked at the mental capacity of our brains, and what our brains are capable of. This chapter included multitasking, and Tugend shares very similar views to those of Morris and Maisto.
D Block Research Question: How does the agriculture, class structure and religion help the growth and poem of the Maya Empire? If the doomsday is coming upon us, what are we going to do? According to the Maya calendar, the end of the world would occur on December 21, 2012 — which luckily didn’t happen. The Maya, except for their advanced knowledge of mathematics and astronomy which allowed them to develop a complex calendar system, also made great achievements in agriculture, language and architecture.
Multitasking makes it difficult to gain any knowledge when a person's attention is in multiple places. Christine has a strong inductive argument that explains
Attention has always been a prized commodity. The brain knows it and cognitive psychologists know it, but the average person has yet to fully grasp the concept. Articles on how to multi-task still flag the covers of popular magazines, and distracting cell phones and tablets accompany students to class on the forefront of their desks next their notes. It has been verified time and time again that the mind simply cannot attend to two things simultaneously; one can pay attention to one thing or another, but not to two things at once. People know that neutralizing distractions will yield invaluable minutes of clarity and focus, but for most, the application of such, is nearly impossible.
Then suddenly you’re down to the wire and your brain experiences a deluge of stress and information overload. This only causes a drain on your energy, causing you to lose sight of the task at hand. Enjoy the Ride It isn’t all fun and games, but take note of where you stumble or your motivation dips- you can then come up with a solution to prevent that from becoming an issue again. You may see a pattern emerge, which allows you to arrange your schedule as required.