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Home » TRANSCRIPT: The Most Compelling Argument Against Tech In Schools: Sophie Winkleman

TRANSCRIPT: The Most Compelling Argument Against Tech In Schools: Sophie Winkleman

Read the full transcript of Sophie Winkleman’s talk “The Most Compelling Argument Against Tech In Schools” At ARC 2025.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Disconnect in the Digital Age

SOPHIE WINKLEMAN: Good afternoon everyone, lovely to see you all, lovely to be here. I’m going to start with a slender anecdote, totally true from about four weeks ago.

It was early evening and I was on a packed 19 bus in London, standing over a young man and a young woman. They were sitting beside each other, both gazing at their smartphones. Nothing unusual about this of course. They were both attractive, smartly dressed, professional looking, around the same age. Willfully invading their privacy, I subtly angled myself to see what they were up to on their phones. They were each on dating apps, reading the profiles of men and women who presented as extremely similar to the two of them.

Our bus was completely true. Our bus reached Piccadilly Circus and both happened to alight at this stop. I watched the two of them as they walked away from each other, one towards Shaftesbury Avenue and the other towards St. James’s. I don’t need to labour the point of what I witnessed with this couple never to be. They were side by side, both seeking companionship or love, but they didn’t even register each other’s existence.

Social media is described as a great connecting force and it can be a wonderful thing, but when we stop noticing people in our immediate surroundings, in favour of the swirling masses online, I don’t think of it in quite such a warm fuzzy glow.

The Digital Destruction of Childhood

Whether it’s my young couple from the bus, teens alone in their bedrooms glued to hours of futile or dangerous rubbish, parents scrolling on their phones while their babies try in vain to catch their eye, or toddlers given Siri voice companions in nurseries, none of these newly acquired habits seem to bode well for our collective spiritual flourishing. The disintegration of adult society and the loneliness of our elderly population is bleak enough, but the digital destruction of childhood is a crisis we must face if we’re to have an alliance of remotely functioning citizens, let alone responsible ones.

I first became interested in the topic of screens and children a few years ago when I was made patron of the education charity School Home Support. I visited schools up and down the country and too often I saw children distracted in classrooms yet silent in playgrounds. Screens were taking their attention away from their teachers during lessons and away from each other during break time. I also observed children in general becoming a different species. The raucous exuberance of youth was being replaced with an anxious irritable insularity which was disturbing to see.

From a personal point of view, I know that if I’d had devices in and out of the classroom I would have bombed academically. I’d have been constantly distracted, thrilled by all the garbage available online. I wouldn’t have read any books and I’d have got up to goodness knows what on my various machines. Our household landline was quite derailing enough. Looking back, I cherish the very analog form of education that I received and the very human connection with my beloved teachers.

It’s been one of the greatest gifts of my life and I want all children to be able to focus, to acquire knowledge and to achieve their maximum potential. I think that should be every civilized society’s aim. But the evidence shows that we have already put this gravely at risk. We left the doors to our children’s classrooms, their bedrooms and their minds wide open to the world. Perhaps we thought we were giving children the right to access everything which might be good out there, but instead we’ve given everyone else the good and the bad access to our children.

The Mental Health Crisis

Let’s consider some facts and figures. As illustrated in Jonathan Haidt’s book, The Anxious Generation, the great rewiring of childhood is causing a plague of mental illness in our children. In the decade up to 2020, the suicide rate for younger teens increased by 167 percent among girls and 91 percent among boys. Hospital admissions for children with eating disorders in the UK have risen sixfold in a decade, the contagious influence of social media cited as a major factor. And 2022 saw a 500 percent increase of self-harming among teens over the past nine years.

In a British study last year, researchers found that one in three children are now short-sighted. Myopia is predicted to affect nearly a billion children around the world by 2050. Too much screen time is the culprit, with blue light harming developing eyes, not to mention interfering with children’s hormones and their sleep rhythms. Spending time outside can be preventative for myopia, yet screens suck children indoors more than in any previous generation.

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Recently, the technology regulator Ofcom reported that a quarter of British children under the age of seven have a smartphone, increasing to 97 percent of 12-year-olds. This mass buy-in to smartphones is resulting in a lost and deeply damaged childhood, with screen addiction displacing nearly every wholesome activity you can think of.

The Lost Art of Childhood

As Douglas Gentile puts it, “time spent on screens is time not spent elsewhere.” A healthy childhood should involve lots of free fun, drawing, running, reading, writing stories, make-believe, kicking a football around, even just staring out of the window and wondering. These are all halcyon images in a sepia tint because they scarcely happen anymore.

Health professionals for safer screens recently issued guidance that 11 to 17-year-olds should have no more than one to two hours screen time per day. This includes everything, iPads, school laptops, smartphones, it’s all just screen time to the brain. And yet, children aged eight to 18 are on average spending seven and a half hours per day on screens, outside of school hours.

Out and about, the reality is starkly visible.