Technology For Kids: Younger Generations Surpass Technology Experts


With technology developing at such a rapid pace, it is not surprising that our children are facing an entirely different upbringing than what is familiar to the parental generations. Instead of individual desks and pens and paper, children in schools today are most likely to be fully capable to work computers, laptops and even tablets and iPads before they leave for high school.

This is especially true in the Bedfordshire area where one child, aged 14, has his own app creation published in the Windows App Store. The fact that he has achieved this even before him and his fellow Year 9 class has been taught programming shows just how influential technology has become in our everyday lives.

The way that the world is developing, and from what we have seen so far, our children will require a far more extensive understanding of computer technology than we have ever known in order to continue such progression. In support of this there are emerging plans of a complete overhaul of the ICT curriculum are coming to light, with prospective plans including a partnership with large technical firms such as Microsoft.[i] What limits this, however, is that teachers now have to teach a subject to an extent that they have not been taught themselves.

With children as young as five starting to learn coding and programming, the levels they will reach come High School should be astounding. This is especially true considering just how much interaction with technology they naturally enjoy having outside of school too. By being exposed to such advanced technology at a young age, they are much more comfortable working things that older generations have waited forty odd years to see. Youngsters are much more at ease with technological advances than the rest of the world, so it makes sense to utilize this for future generations.

What is becoming apparent, however, is the gap this is already beginning to bridge in standards of technology. With primary school children starting to complete tasks it has taken adults years to master already, how will the next twenty years fare? Experts in website design, coding and programming now will not be experts in the near future at the rate of development we are seeing. It is amusing to think that although there is beneficial support available for school’s web design in Luton and the Bedfordshire area, these could soon be done by the pupils at these school’s themselves!

Yet this gap is necessary in order to keep pushing technology’s limits. The future generation of coders and web designers must always be that bit further ahead of the current standard. This is then ensures that they not only fully understand the progress technology has made thus far, but that they can work to better it, just how it has been bettered in the past. With this clearly prepared for already, we shall just have to wait and see where this new technical generation will take us!



[i] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationopinion/10840632/Could-todays-ICT-lessons-inspire-tomorrows-Bill-Gates.html

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