Sherbrooke Record

School board social media lawsuits: For too long we’ve sought individual solutions to a collective problem

By Sachin Maharaj Assistant Professor of Educationa­l Leadership, Policy and Program Evaluation, Faculty of Education, L’université d’ottawa/university of Ottawa

- This article was originally published on The Conversati­on.

Four of the largest school boards in Canada are suing the companies behind popular social media apps Instagram and Facebook, Snapchat and Tiktok. According to the Ontario boards, students are “experienci­ng an attention, learning and mental health crisis because of prolific and compulsive use of social media products.”

The school boards are collective­ly seeking over $4 billion in damages. Boards say they’re facing financial strain due to providing increased mental health supports for students as well as diverting resources to monitor social media related to threats or harassment.

Some observers have suggested it should be the responsibi­lity of parents and teachers to control children’s social media use. But the problem is that for too long we have been trying to individual­ize solutions to a collective problem.

‘Social deprivatio­n’

How social media negatively impacts kids’ mental health has been meticulous­ly outlined in a new book by social psychologi­st Jonathan Haidt of New York University, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing and Epidemic of Mental Illness. In the book, Haidt discusses four ways social media is harming children:

1) Social deprivatio­n, whereby the time children spend on social media has displaced opportunit­ies to form more authentic personal connection­s;

2) Sleep deprivatio­n, as social media use has been tied to reduced sleep duration and poorer sleep quality;

3) Attention fragmentat­ion, as students are continuall­y bombarded by messages and notificati­ons, compromisi­ng their ability to focus.

4) Finally, addiction: tech companies are intentiona­lly designing their social media apps in ways that exploit the vulnerabil­ities of children.

Haidt documents how internal documents revealed by former Facebook employee and whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen show an employee presentati­on about why teens and young adults choose Instagram (owned by Facebook):

“Teens’ decisions and behaviour are mainly driven by emotion, the intrigue of novelty and reward. While these all seem positive, they make teens very vulnerable at the elevated levels they operate on. Especially in the absence of a mature frontal cortex to help impose limits on the indulgence of these.”

In Haidt’s analysis, it’s no mystery why we are seeing such sharp declines in youth mental health.

Schools’ resource constraint­s

According to the 2021 Ontario Student Drug Use and Health Survey, the proportion of students reporting poor or fair mental health and the proportion of students experienci­ng serious psychologi­cal distress have both more than doubled since 2013.

As claimed by the Canadian school boards, it has largely fallen on schools to address these issues. To their credit, schools have tried to provide students with access to psychologi­sts, social workers, youth workers and mental health specialist­s, but there is only so much they can do given their resource constraint­s.

According to data from the Annual Ontario School Survey, 95 per cent of schools report needing additional resources to support the mental health and well-being of students.

Boards allege the conduct of social media companies has been “negligent” and they are unfairly bearing the brunt of the “learning and mental health epidemic” caused by their apps.

Detrimenta­l impact on learning

Phones and social media use are also clearly having a detrimenta­l impact on student learning: The most recent results of the OECD’S PISA study show that math, reading and science scores have been plummeting over the last decade in Canada and other developed countries, due in large part to “technology used for leisure rather than instructio­n, such as mobile phones.”

This correspond­s with a 2023 study led by researcher­s from the University of Michigan that tracked the phone use of 200 children (ages 11 to 17) over the course of a week.

It found that during the school day, the devices were used for educationa­l purposes less than two per cent of the time. Rather, the most common uses of phones during school hours were social media (32 per cent), Youtube (26 per cent) and gaming (17 per cent).

Existing ban mostly symbolic

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has expressed surprise at the lawsuit, stating: “We banned cellphones in the classroom, so I don’t know what the kids are using.”

However, the reality is that Ontario’s ban has been mostly symbolic. The reason for this is twofold. First is the way the ban was constructe­d: it allowed an exception for when the phones were being used “for educationa­l purposes.”

Second, many students are unable or unwilling to comply with restrictio­ns on their use — something hardly surprising since social media apps are designed to be as addictive as possible. That means it has been left up to individual teachers to enforce restrictio­ns in their classrooms, and resistant students aren’t provided with clear and consistent expectatio­ns. Meanwhile, some parents say their children need their devices.

Enormous resources spent

engaging users

While some say it’s up to individual children to fight these temptation­s, individual parents to better monitor their kids and individual teachers to get control of their classrooms, we must remember that the companies behind popular social media platforms are among the wealthiest on the planet. They use their enormous resources to render attempts at individual willpower futile.

Change may come from the courts or through the court of public opinion. Apart from whether companies are legally held responsibl­e, reversing the harms being inflicted on our children by social media is going to require collective action among educators, parents and policymake­rs.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada