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Hannah Rodriguez's avatar

My parents were staunchly no phone when I first hit high school. Shortly after my mom dealt with severe medical issues for 4+ years which in turn made it "necessary" for me to have a phone for communication sake as there were a lot of moving parts. I wasn't supposed to have one till I was 18, instead I had one at 13. Filters and settings are easy to work around. Nearly 11 years later I've gotten rid of my smartphone have taken up a dumb phone. It is truly freeing. My fiancee is on board too which is great because when kids come around in the future we know we want to be as tech free as possible. Happy to come across another substack with this focus.

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Chris Woolfe's avatar

Excellent work! I love reading your blog. The longer we can wait to give smartphones to kids, the better.

That being said, I don't think the Sapien Labs study provides evidence to put a blanket recommendation against tablets. That study combines tablets and smartphones into a single category. From Haidt's research, we can get a bit closer to root cause: Smartphones enabled a 24/7 social-media lifestyle, and it is this lifestyle that has been highly damaging for mental health.

I think that high quality educational content on tablets, the order of two hours per week can be beneficial for some kids.

JAMA Pediatrics issued guidelines on tablets and young children, which is discussed here: https://www.afterbabel.com/p/what-actually-matters-kids-screens

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