English, asked by rathoreharpreet, 1 year ago

Technology has been a boon to our society. However, it has backfired manya
times. Elaborate with reference to the poem 'Mike Teavee'.
pls answer I will mark brainliest

Answers

Answered by prettystefina11
2

Yes, technology has been a boon to our society but has backfired or is still backfiring many a time.

‘Mike Teavee’ is a poem written by Roald Dahl. The poem describes very clearly how television sets have been ruining children from a few decades. Even today, we experience the practical situations where parents have nothing else expect a television set to control their children while they would carry on with their other duties.

An infant or a toddler holds a tiny brain with a huge sense of creativity and learning capability. After the invention of technologies like a television, a tablet or the phone, the creative and the sensible growth of children’s brains have precisely decreased.

When parents switch on the television for their children, they might as well think that this could be the best option to control their kids from any other minor or major disaster that could take place at home. This is because kids tend to just freeze and cling to the screen once it starts working. This act might be useful to proceed with the jobs and other works of the parents as they might not have to use their eyes to watch over their kids. But many parents wouldn’t think about the perilous sequences, consequences and the effects that this very act could lead to. Clinging and depending on such technological gadgets, especially at a very young age can cause huge damage to the child’s life. By constantly looking at the screen, the child’s ability to grow in his brain decreases. He would only start to see and see rather than to learn. He would become dull and retarded. His mind turns out to be blank and dependent.

Today, it is not just about toddlers or children. People tend to use and depend on their electronic gadgets for every single task. They tend to take the help of technology and the thinking power of people has drastically been decreasing in the past few decades. Technology apparently started being a part of human physiology.

Yes, there are a way lot number of advantages of technology today, but the technology actually started overtaking human life. A balance between the usage and the pause of the technology should always be taught and learnt to have brighter days.

Answered by Arslankincsem
1

Answer:

At the point when the youngsters are before a TV, they 'sit and gaze and gaze and sit' for extended periods of time. They don't appear to move from that point, as they likely overlook everything around them in reality. Or maybe, the one they watch on the TV turns out to be genuine until further notice.

They are nearly spellbound by this imbecilic box. They are 'completely flushed', their psyches are loaded up with those 'stunning shocking garbage' which are for the most part incredible and improper for the age. Those TV shows kill their significant time and make them lethargic with no space for their physical play and exercise. They have no extent of investing energy with books and nature and associating with others.

Viewing the TV consistently harms the sense in the head. Kids are drawn far from the truth, this present reality around him. He just accepts what he watches, without thinking about the specific circumstance. His very own condition scarcely coordinates with the ones he sees on screen, yet at the same time he supposes all that are genuine and pertinent to him.

It additionally murders the intensity of creative ability in the brain. Youngsters begin to live in a pre-set conjured up universe that they see on the screen. They gradually lose their own inventive reasoning, their very own creative energy. In spite of the fact that what TV demonstrates show are for the most part anecdotal, that is a nearby impersonation of this present reality, not a totally unique world as in a fantasy.

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