A Slate article posted yesterday “Birding Applications: Great For Kids, Bad for Birds?” has a title that is misleading at best, and at worst an outright lie. Strong words, I know, but I think warranted because getting children outside and learning is an imperative for society and a focus of ours at Birdeez.
Jason Bittel begins with a sentiment we can agree with:
Getting kids into nature is a tough sell today. Inside, we have computers, televisions, video games, and climate control. Outside, there are mosquitoes, sunburn, and poison ivy. Of course, these two worlds are not inherently incompatible, and smartphones are starting to provide a link between them.
After that point, children completely fall out of the article. There are no children with smartphones running amok destroying birds with their apps. The article becomes a discussion over the ethics and environmental impacts of playing bird songs in the field. This is an important issue, one recently highlighted by the Dorset Wildlife Trust regarding the struggling Nightjar which nests in England.
This problem for birds arises because adults play bird songs with apps to attract birds, often to take photos. This disturbs birds’ regular activity, impacts their ability to feed and can be especially harmful for endangered and nesting birds. An important lesson for everyone. But why title this article as a children with apps vs. birds?
Because conflict and accusation sell.
I don’t think we can blame Mr. Bittel for this lying title, as the URL for the article is likely it’s original title: Do_Bird_Song_Apps_Confuse_the_Real_Birds. Seems perfectly reasonable and descriptive of what the content of the article. But one his editor probably didn’t like. “Bird Apps vs. Birds” isn’t as controversial as “Kids with apps vs. Birds”.
If you are tempted to defend the title because of it’s question mark should realize that it isn’t a question but an accusation. It is the same as writing the question “Did [Famous Celebrity] Cheat on [Other Famous Celebrity]?”, where the implied answer is “yes”. If the answer was “no” there would be no story. This is especially important because most people won’t ever read the entire article, instead absorbing the headline and it’s implied answer and moving on. Bird apps, good for children, bad for birds. Kids win, birds lose. But this is just wrong.
Why do we at Birdeez care so much about this lying title?
Because with bird apps like Birdeez both the children and the birds win.
Today it is so hard to get children outside and learning. Schools have drastically cut the budget for anything that doesn’t have to do with state or national standards, including field trips. Additionally, children spend less time outside than at any other time in history, almost none without organized sports. Richard Louv coined the phrase “Nature Deficit Disorder” to describe the problems children experience when they spend little to no time outside.
We believe that Birdeez can help address Nature Deficit Disorder by being an approachable way for parents and children to learn about the natural world. Birdeez is designed to be bird identification for the video game generation; a bird identification app that appeals to digital natives like children growing up with iPhones and iPads at home and school. Apps like Birdeez can nudge children to go outside and learn about the natural environment.
Some of our most rewarding experiences with Birdeez have come by working with kids on with NatureTrack. While taking children on nature focused field trips we give them the app to identify birds. Sue Eisaguirre, founder of NatureTrack, recently said to me “We’ve seen how children really own the identification when they do it themselves with Birdeez instead of only being shown and told the birds.” And we’ve seen this ourselves every time we work with kids.
We believe that Birdeez will help create the next generation of bird lovers, which is essential for the long term health and protection of birds. In order to foster life long interest in the natural environment, we need more kids to have access to applications like Birdeez and programs like NatureTrack, not less. The next generation of bird lovers are needed to carry the torch of bird conservation into the future. These children will be the people who know how to use their apps responsibly to enjoy the birds and protect them for generations.
This is something Jason Bittel and many of the folks at Slate probably agree with, but instead of spreading that message they created a false conflict and mislead their readers hoping to make a headline more clickable.
Think I went too far? Not far enough? Let us know in the comments.
Given the challenge of getting kids outdoors these days and inspiring them to take a closer look at wildlife around them, bird apps provide a way to “hook” their attention. The majority of people that I know who use bird apps are usually people with a deep interest in natural history and often use these apps to engage children.