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Page 12 THE VILLADOM TIMES III & IV • August 21, 2013
Pros & cons of using the Internet for schoolwork
The classroom atmosphere familiar to today’s children
is likely very different from the atmosphere their parents
were accustomed to when they were students. Many of
these changes can be traced to technology, which has
gradually had an increasing presence in the classroom
over the last several decades.
But technology has not only changed the classroom
experience for kids, but thanks in large part to the Inter-
net, technology also has changed the way kids approach
their schoolwork at home. Though a potentially valuable
learning tool, the Internet also poses some problems for
today’s students. The following are some of the advan-
tages and disadvantages of relying on the Internet to com-
plete schoolwork.
The accessibility of the Internet can be a significant
benefit to students. Students have a wealth of resources
available to them online, and those resources can make it
easier for kids to understand key concepts on nearly every
subject. Whereas students might once have been forced to
trek to the library to research a given subject, now they
can do so from the comforts of home. Because the Inter-
net is accessible 24/7, information is at students’ disposal
regardless of when they sit down to do their work.
Another advantage to using the Internet to complete
schoolwork is that the Internet can be an extension of
the classroom beyond school walls. Educational web-
sites abound, and many of
these sites are written and
monitored by professional
educators. These sites can
be valuable resources for
students who may find
themselves struggling with
certain lessons. Many of
their questions or concerns
may already be addressed,
and certain topics may be
more easily explained on a
website written by a profes-
sional educator or scholar
in a given field. Rather
than waiting to address an
issue in class, students can
visit such websites to get
answers to their questions
immediately. The Internet can also
provide students with a
forum to discuss their
studies. That forum may
engage kids and make them
better students. A passion-
ate online discussion about
a reading assignment may
encourage kids to approach such assignments more fer-
vently. Though such discussions may exist in a traditional
classroom atmosphere, many students might be hesitant
to express themselves in front of their classmates, feeling
the anonymity of the Internet is a more inviting and less
stressful forum than a classroom of their peers.
As beneficial as the Internet can be to students, it is not
always what it is cracked up to be. Much of the concern
about using the Internet to complete schoolwork is the
reliability of the information on the Internet. Many sites
offer reliable and well-researched information, but many
do not. Students, especially younger students, may not be
capable of discerning fact from fiction and will simply
take the written word on the Internet as truth. That may
land students in hot water or make it more difficult for
them to understand their subjects.
Another significant disadvantage to using the Internet
for schoolwork is that students may be tempted to cheat.
Because the Internet is so vast, students might be tempted
to cut and paste answers to homework problems from the
Internet or copy information from websites and claim it as
their own, feeling as if there is no way their teachers will
ever know. Some students may not even understand that
such cutting, pasting, or copying is wrong. In addition to
being wrong, such behavior makes it harder for students
to learn the material, which will make it more difficult for
them to grasp key concepts going forward.
The Internet can also be a significant distraction.
Social networking sites can quickly distract kids from
their schoolwork, costing them valuable time they should
be devoting to their studies.
For more than a decade, the Internet has proven a valu-
able resource for students across the globe. But students
must recognize there are advantages and disadvantages
to relying too heavily on the Internet when pursuing their
studies.