For many years, schools believed that more technology would lead to better education. Laptops replaced notebooks. Tablets replaced textbooks. Online resources replaced library shelves. The future seemed obvious: the more high-tech a school became, the better students would learn.
But things did not turn out as expected.
Students today have access to more information than any generation in history. A question that once required a trip to the library can now be answered in seconds. Entire courses, lectures, books, and research papers are available with a few taps on a screen.
This raises a simple question: If information is everywhere, why do so many people seem to retain less of it?
Part of the answer may be how we think.
In the past, information was harder to get. If you borrowed a book, you knew you had limited time with it. Today, almost everything is online and can be found again in seconds. Because of that, many people feel less need to remember what they read.
Knowing information is not the same as knowing where to find it. A search engine can store knowledge, but a human mind uses knowledge.
Many technologies were introduced with the goal of making learning easier. Research became faster. Educational materials became more accessible. Communication improved.
But learning is more than accessing information. It requires attention, memory, repetition, practice, and sometimes struggle. A student who spends time working through a difficult problem is not only finding an answer but also building the ability to think. A student who reads carefully is not only collecting facts but also training focus and comprehension.
When every obstacle is removed, something valuable may disappear along with it.
The same question applies not only to students but also to the people responsible for teaching them. If technology can reduce the mental effort required for learning, it can also reduce the mental effort required for teaching.
Today, artificial intelligence can generate lesson plans within seconds. This can reduce paperwork and save time. But if teachers rely on it too heavily, part of the thinking behind good teaching may disappear.
A lesson plan is more than a document. It comes from thinking about students. Where will they struggle? Which examples will help them understand? What misconceptions might appear? How should the lesson be adjusted for this specific class?
These questions cannot be fully answered by software because every classroom is different. A lesson that worked perfectly last year may not work this year.
Teaching is a bit like medicine. Two patients may have the same symptom but require different treatment. In the same way, two classes may study the same subject but require different approaches.
The best teachers observe, adapt, and respond. A template cannot replace that process.
The same pattern can be seen beyond education. Technology affects attention spans, reading habits, communication, entertainment, and family life. In many cases, these changes are connected to the same idea: reducing effort and increasing convenience.
There is nothing wrong with convenience. Many technological advances save time, reduce frustration, and make valuable information more accessible. The real question is whether convenience is removing obstacles or removing opportunities for growth.
This does not mean technology is the enemy. It has expanded access to knowledge, connected people across the world, and created opportunities that previous generations could hardly imagine.
The problem is that convenience and growth are not always the same thing. Some forms of effort are obstacles. Other forms of effort are teachers.
Education was never meant to be a bayabas falling directly into the hands of Juan Tamad.
The process matters. The reading matters. The thinking matters. And sometimes, the struggle matters most.
Technology is at its best when it supports these things rather than replacing them. The goal should not be a world where learning becomes effortless. The goal should be a world where technology helps people learn without removing the very experiences that make learning possible.
⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ
