I was talking recently with one of my students who will graduate in May. He told me about his first year in college and began his reminiscence with: 鈥淏ack in the day鈥︹
He鈥檚 25 and I thought to myself: Back in what day? Back in the day for him was five years ago.
Most of his conversation centered on technology. He talked about getting used to devices such as smart phones, tablets and video games.
He talked about how social media has changed the way people communicate. He talked about changes in the classroom, such as the use of graphing calculators, clickers, eBooks and web courses.
Indeed, he has seen some changes.
I have thought about our conversation many times and it makes me smile. I compared my first year in college nearly 45 years ago to his.
When did technology become such an integral part of our language and the way we view the world?
For someone in my generation, this is scary and thrilling at the same time. In the 1960s, I read and watched science fiction about the future. George Orwell鈥檚 Nineteen Eighty-Four, Ray Bradbury鈥檚 Fahrenheit 451, and Aldous Huxley鈥檚 Brave New World were books that made me think 鈥渨hat if and what then.鈥
Gene Roddenberry鈥檚 TV show, Star Trek, talked about a time in the future, such as stardate 2016. It seemed so far away. But it鈥檚 here!
Roddenberry didn鈥檛 quite get all of the technology right. But as I think about it, just like today, most of the conversations by the characters鈥擟apt. Kirk, Mr. Spock, Dr. McCoy and Mr. Scott鈥攚ere laced with tech terms (warp speed, transporter, food replicator, photon torpedoes, phasers, holodeck and tricorder, to name a few).
After my conversation with my student, I started making a list of technology-related terms that crossed my path. In just two weeks, I鈥檓 up to 75 terms from 鈥渁ggregator鈥 to 鈥淶ip drive.鈥
I鈥檓 sure there are many more that I didn鈥檛 jot down. And, who knows, I just might embrace tech speak and utilize it in my conversations more often鈥r not.
Nevertheless, I think scientist Roy Amara, past president of the Institute for the Future, had it right: 鈥淲e tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate the effect in the long run.鈥
Rebekah McCloud is director of the 麻豆原创鈥檚 PRIME STEM/Student Support Services Program. She can be reached at Rebekah.McCloud@ucf.edu.