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Home » How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back: Jonathan Haidt (Transcript)

How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back: Jonathan Haidt (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of social psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s talk at TED2026 on April 15, 2026.  

Editor’s Note: In this thought-provoking talk, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt explores how the rise of screens and AI is fundamentally reshaping childhood and disconnecting us from our innate need for deep social connection. He outlines three principles of “technoskepticism” to help us understand these challenges and offers a path toward reclaiming the essential experiences of growing up in a digital age.  

The Human Need for Community

JONATHAN HAIDT: So, to begin, I invite you all to remember a time in your life, a period in your life when you felt fully integrated into a group. Maybe you were on a sports team, maybe you played in a band, or maybe you just had a great group of friends who loved to hang out together. Or maybe it was at work, maybe you were part of a team trying to do something big and difficult under time pressure, but you all pulled together.

Whatever it was, my question to you is, does that memory glow? Do you look back on that as something special and magical, that time in your life?

The great biologist E.O. Wilson says that humans aren’t just social, like dogs and chimpanzees. We are ultra-social, like bees and ants. We have a massive division of labor, and we love to do things that put us in a mindset of one for all, all for one. Yet our hives aren’t made out of wax, they’re made out of shared culture and shared experiences.

Technology, Childhood, and the Ultra-Social Species

My talk today isn’t really about bees and ants, it’s actually about technology and childhood. But let’s see what we can see about technology and childhood if we start with this premise that human beings are ultra-social creatures with deep needs for community and communion.

As a social psychologist who studies the effects of digital tech on young people, what I see from this perspective is very concerning. I think it justifies a general sense of wariness or skepticism about the technologies that are pushing their way into childhood today.

The Phone-Based Childhood and the Rise of Social Media

So let’s start with social media. In the early 2010s, teens traded in their flip phones for smartphones, and the phone-based childhood began. Their social lives moved on to social media. At first we thought this would be fine, maybe even better, but quantity pushes out quality, and they started spending a lot less time with each other in person.

And that’s a problem for our ultra-social species, because a lot of our evolved bonding mechanisms involve our bodies. So we connect with people, we bond with people when we eat with them, when we share food with them, when we share laughter, when we move together in synchrony, even if it’s just walking next to each other, and we bond together when we touch.

But when everything moved online, teens across the developed world lost most of those bonding experiences. Levels of loneliness and anxiety began to rise almost immediately in many countries simultaneously.

And this wasn’t just a historical correlation. There are now multiple lines of evidence showing that social media is causing harm at an industrial scale. One line is the dozens of experiments showing that when you randomly assign people — these are usually with adults, young adults — when you randomly assign people to greatly reduce their social media use for at least a week, their levels of anxiety and depression go down.

The Deeper Damage: Attention and the Adolescent Brain

But what I’ve learned in the last two years is that I grossly understated the damage in The Anxious Generation, because I focused on the mental health outcomes. That’s where we have the best data, that’s where we’re doing the most work. But I now believe that an even larger damage is the diminishment of the human capacity to pay sustained attention.

One third of all American teens say that they’re on a social media platform almost constantly, just throughout the day. And the main thing they’re doing on those social media platforms is watching very short videos. Young people call it brain rot, which is a funny term, but it might really be true, because the adolescent brain is always a brain that’s being remodeled.

The neural network of a child has to convert itself, has to rewire itself, to become the neural network of an adult. And that rewiring process — the neurons finding each other — that’s shaped by whatever you’re doing every day. And it’s shaped by whatever everyone else says is prestigious. Which means that puberty is the worst possible time for a human being to be on social media.

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Protect Brain Development Through Puberty

For our ultrasocial species, that rewiring should be guided by huge amounts of social interaction in the real world, not by TikTok’s algorithm. I imagine there’s a lot of parents in the audience. So here’s the first principle of what we might call techno-skepticism. Protect brain development through puberty. That’s why it’s so important for countries to follow Australia’s example. Let’s just raise the age for opening social media accounts to 16, as Australia did.

The Problem With EdTech in Schools

All right, now let’s look at edtech. Of course there are good uses of technology in education. My kids have learned a lot from Khan Academy. But I’m very concerned about what happened when we started putting computers and tablets on kids’ desks. This is the so-called one-to-one device policies. Computers and tablets are multi-function entertainment systems. If kids can get to the internet, they will play video games and watch short videos, watch YouTube shorts, and even porn.

As soon as we brought in one-to-one devices in the 2010s, national test scores began dropping in the USA. And they dropped in many other countries, especially in the countries that most firmly embraced edtech. Now I can’t prove that these declines were caused by the screens and the apps that we put on kids’ desks.

But consider this, Sweden led the world in digitizing education in the 2010s.