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Defaulting to Distraction

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a cartoon person burdened by social media app icons

The school year is just starting, so millions of students are now receiving their school-issued laptops. Nearly all such laptops will be Windows devices, with the default web browser of Microsoft Edge. And Edge comes with a default homepage that is, well, a bit much:

A screenshot of Microsoft Edge's home screen, full of distractions

Thus, every time a student uses their laptop to access the internet, they are bombarded with distractions.

And surprisingly, 90% of them will just put up with it. They don’t know that you can easily turn off all of this nonsense by clicking the little gear button in the upper right corner and changing the settings. When I show students this, they invariably let out a sigh of relief.

Similarly, these laptops will give you an endless stream of unnecessary notifications that serve only to distract you from your work. Smartphones and their apps do the same thing. It’s as though the default setting for all of our devices is “Distraction Mode.”

I wouldn’t count on the device makers to change the defaults any time soon, so we need to show kids how to take matters into their own hands using both direct instruction and modeling.

Settings can be changed. Notifications can be turned off. Phones can be put into “Do Not Disturb” or “Airplane Mode.”

We don’t have to default to distraction.

The post Defaulting to Distraction appeared first on Northwest Educational Services.


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