Any candidate for local public office that hasn't yet acknowledged this as a major problem not just with personal devices but also with school-issued devices has lost my vote.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/04/us/social-media-schools.html?unlocked_article_code=1.nlA.TxAz._2Pq7SFKjc4k&smid=url-share |
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Yes, that makes total sense. The tech industry has pretty much single handedly destroyed secondary education to secure children as their new customer base, attacking from both home and school.
Honestly though, the parents are mostly to blame, being too willfully ignorant to know or try to find out, they've been sticking their head in the sand letting it all happen. And the school systems adoption of these projects (and their lack of prevention during school hours) is mainly due to a fear of parental backlash. |
Sure, blame the parents who are going to work using similarly distracting platforms? Expected to be checking their Slack, Teams, etc notifications. Keeping up with emails. And the parents who are managing the endless apps for their kids appointments, activities, etc. Parents are trapped in the system as well. WTF. This is the reality of our modern age, and the fault of purely profit motivated decision making. |
+1 Public school bureaucrats really love to blame parents for poor decisions by school districts. Gmafb I'm not the one saying "Every student should have access to AI tools" - that is the one and only MCPS Superintendent Thomas Taylor. He owns that fully. Nobody I know in my kid's ES wants our kids to have access to AI tools. |
Just secondary education? |
Parents are the ones advocating legislation to create actual limits on screens in schools. They know the school districts will resist, not because of parents but because of edtech corruption |
And, posting here. |
Yeah time on screens is not really productive because of all the distractions, like this website. Students should not have access to screens in school for this reason. If an adult wants to post here on a Sunday that's their business. |