Special Report
Student Well-Being Q&A

‘It Terrifies Me': Clinical Psychologist on Tech Overuse in the Age of AI

By Kevin Bushweller — March 25, 2024 4 min read
Custom illustration showing a young female student wearing a book bag and standing inside a protective bubble that looks like a split happy and sad emoji.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Lisa Strohman, a clinical psychologist who specializes in technology overuse, makes the case that you can track the rise in youth mental health problems from the introduction of Instagram and Snapchat in 2010. Those social media sites and what would come later—TikTok—fueled the overuse and misuse of technology, especially among school-age kids.

That is why she has dedicated her career to connecting the dots between technology overuse/misuse and mental health problems. She is not a Luddite, far from it—she tests out new technologies like ChatGPT and other AI tools and believes technology has a meaningful role in teaching and learning. But she has grave concerns that many kids in the current generation are using technology in ways that are driving them into a mental health hole that will prevent them from reaching their true potential academically and personally. And Strohman—the author of Unplug: Raising Kids In A Technology Addicted World, and Digital Distress: Growing Up Online—believes schools and parents can help turn the tide in a better direction.

Education Week spoke with Strohman via Zoom about her work. This interview was edited for brevity and clarity.

Lisa Strohman

Walk into a school and you often see kids at a table together, all on their phones, not talking to each other. What are the downsides of that kind of behavior?

I go into schools and look at their tech policies, I look at their school lunches, and I walk the campus because I want to see how they’re managing that [challenge]. It is one of the biggest complaints about recess in the elementary schools or lunches in middle and high school. What it does to the kids is it really gives them a buffer and an excuse. It gives them the ability to manage their decisionmaking based upon a phone, and they don’t really have to have the difficult conversations or learn how to create a conversation. So eye contact is gone.

Tell us about the work you’re doing with schools.

I created a program called Digital Citizen Academy that was my effort as a clinical psychologist working with families for almost two decades to give support where I could see it needed to be. I did a K-8 program so we can start in elementary school. The approach is really going to the school, help the school understand: What is your tech policy? How are you creating a partnership with the parents? Because the shift that I saw for almost a decade was that schools would say these devices were the parents’ issue because they’re buying them for their kids. And the parents would say, “But you’ve got my kid for eight hours a day, so why aren’t you fixing it?” And so there’s been a standoff.

And, so, I came in and I was like, “Hey, look, we can actually educate both of them.” We can have the parents go through a parent program that gives them the education on the research, the structural damage, the neurochemical damage, the things that happen from a technology-overuse standpoint, and we can get them educated and then we can get the kids [involved]. They are the most powerful technological cohort in history, and the industry is banking on them being siloed and separated without being able to band together and understand that they have a voice. We teach kids how to become ambassadors in this space, not just in their school, but in the policies that are going to be upcoming that are influencing them.

The expanded use of artificial intelligence is a huge issue in schools. How do you think the rising use of AI-driven technologies such as deepfake videos will affect students’ mental health?

Well, it terrifies me. The deepfakes are challenging because you have to think through the developmental appropriateness of a student. So if you have a 13-year-old and a peer creates a false picture of them and then circulates it through the school, the 13-year-old victim of that circulation doesn’t really have a voice or a platform to be able to argue against it before the social and psychological damage has occurred. And so it doesn’t matter anymore if it’s true or not. So there’s a lot of damage that’s starting to occur in a very quick way.

I’ve done a lot of trainings on [AI and ChatGPT] and I’ve talked about it a lot because I think that schools are missing an opportunity if they just say, “You can never use it” and they ban it. How do we use it and understand the limitations on it? Oftentimes, I’ll tell kids, “Test it out.” It’s a really good opportunity to teach around it, how to use it and what it’s appropriate for.

What is your advice to educators about how to help students find a better balance in their use of technology?

That’s a great question. I talk about the “power of one” a lot. I have such a respect for the relationship that a teacher can have with a student. And in terms of the tech in it, I think that having every teacher understand that it’s OK to tell your students: “Listen, the world is moving very fast. You’ve got a lot of influences coming at you through these platforms, but I’m here and I’m a person who you can trust.” And as much as they possibly can, have that open door for those kids so they can come in and just talk.

A version of this article appeared in the April 03, 2024 edition of Education Week as ‘It Terrifies Me': Clinical Psychologist on Tech Overuse in the Age of AI

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Well-Being Webinar
Attend to the Whole Child: Non-Academic Factors within MTSS
Learn strategies for proactively identifying and addressing non-academic barriers to student success within an MTSS framework.
Content provided by Renaissance
Classroom Technology K-12 Essentials Forum How to Teach Digital & Media Literacy in the Age of AI
Join this free event to dig into crucial questions about how to help students build a foundation of digital literacy.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Student Well-Being The Influential Allies These Schools Are Enlisting to Boost Attendance
A newly formed group of school districts will rely on the help of their communities to craft absence-fighting strategies.
4 min read
Back of a teen girl walking home from school while wearing a backpack with one strap hanging off her shoulder.
iStock/Getty
Student Well-Being Teens Are Looking for Mental Health Support Online. What That Means for Schools
Young people are turning to websites, social media, and apps for mental health support.
4 min read
Hand holding a mobile phone with an app asking "What is Your Mood Today? Measure Your Mental State" with a blue "Let's Explore" button
iStock/Getty
Student Well-Being Q&A How to Address Parents' Concerns That SEL Goes Against Their Values
A Texas instructional coach shares insights she has learned from talking with hesitant parents.
3 min read
Illustration concept of emotional intelligence, showing a woman balancing emotion control using her hand to balance smile and sad face icons.
iStock/Getty
Student Well-Being Pause Before You Post: A Social Media Guide for Educators in Tense Political Times
5 tips for educators and their students to avoid making harmful or false statements online that they later regret.
6 min read
Tight crop of a man's hands using a mobile phone with the popup box that reads "Delete post, Are you sure you want to delete this post? Cancel or Delete"
Gina Tomko/Education Week + Getty