Nobody ever likes the way I answer surveys, I always end up giving something of a lesson on survey design to the designer in the process of answering one, but oh well
Gender: Male
Age: 34
Ethnicity: White, non-hispanic, american? Do you want my ancestry mix here? Should I use the census race categories in formulating my answer? What are you really looking for here...
Occupation: System administrator, but that's a recent career change from 10 years as a programmer
Income: You'd do better to offer a choice of ranges...
City and State: Atlanta, GA (not exactly, but close enough...

)
Please those of which answer to the following (TRUTHFUL PLEASE):
1.Would you prefer to walk/ride a bike or ride/drive a vehicle to get to your destination? If the destination is close enough I'd always prefer to walk, but that's rarely the case so I usually end up driving
2.When solving division or multiplication, would you solve it in your head, by paper, or by calculator? If by calculator, would you be able to solve it by paper? For trivial numbers I'll do it in my head. Start involving large numbers or odd fractions and it'll have to be some other method, in which it will depend if I'm sitting in front of a computer or not - if so I'll use the calculator application on the computer, otherwise I'll do it on paper. I'm not going to go rooting around for a calculator specifically. Unless I'm bored, like if I'm on an excercise machine and anyways nothing else to do, I may do non-trivial math problems in my head just for practice
3.Would you rather go out on a typical day or stay home and play video games or use the internet? Yes

Just depends on my mood and the weather.
4.On average, how many hours a week do you spend on the internet or watching television? TV: 0
Internet: Does that include hours spent on the internet at work when you are supposed to be working

I have no idea, it used to be a lot more but I've cut back considerably of late, maybe 15 to 20? Not including work usage. If you include work usage it goes up dramatically, but then a lot of the work usage is legitimately for work purposes.
5. Do you own a cell phone? If so, what do you use it for most? I do, but nobody ever calls me

So that leaves most of the usage for work purposes.
6.When doing any type of school related work, do you rely on the internet for answers? Chose one please.
never []
rarely []
sometimes []
often []
always []
One answer, pshaw! Sorry, it's a poorly worded question and my educational experience spans several Internet eras, so you'll just have to suck up multiple answers

In high school and earlier the answer would have been never, because the internet was not in wide-spread use at the time, 100 baud modems were teh suck and there wasn't the content available anyway. As to my undergrad, well, usenet wasn't really an ideal place to look for answers and archie and gopher would have been utterly useless. The world wide web was just starting to come into popular usage in my senior year of college so I didn't really use it for school work, no.
But now that I am presently doing a masters degree, I do tend to use the Internet quite a lot. But that's more because I need to spend a lot of time with the US Code, and it's a hell of a lot easier to search an on-line version of the code than try to find anything in a print version... But I wouldn't answer always, just often.
7. Without technology, would you say that education would be much harder?How broadly are you defining technology here? I hate to be so pedantic but.. well, actually no I don't hate that, I love to be pedantic

Because I could trivially argue that the printing press, pencils and light bulbs constitute "technology" and without them education would be much harder. But if by technology you mean the World Wide Web, graphing calcuators and laptop computers, then it simply depends on what educational level you're talking about. I suspect at the earlier levels, elementary school, it may actually be harmful to basic education to rely heavily on technology, while at the graduate level absolutely it is very helpful.
But helpful vs. harder? Perhaps a bit harder, but I wouldn't say "much" harder. At least not for the serious student who actually cares about learning. For the lazy student who does the absolute minimum to pass because they just want the credentials as a gateway to a better job and resents actually having to really learn anything, yeah, for those people it is harder to not have the technology. Just a matter of perspective