this post was submitted on 16 Feb 2026
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The middle schooler had been begging to opt out, citing headaches from the Chromebook screen and a dislike of the AI chatbot recently integrated into it.

Parents across the country are taking steps to stop their children from using school-issued Chromebooks and iPads, citing concerns about distractions and access to inappropriate content that they fear hampers their kids’ education.

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[–] nottelling@lemmy.world 12 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Kids are already coming out of school computer illiterate. They know how to use specific applications, but don't know things like directory hierarchy. Onboarding young people into working with general office productivity like SharePoint, or giving them a real grown up laptop instead of an ipad is like teaching boomers to open PDFs all over again. All the same old training and helpdesk calls.

the solution is the same as it was 30 years ago: computer class where they deep dive into how the things work, not just how Microsoft and Apple decide the things are used.

[–] KiloGex@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

I don't disagree. We need better computer literacy programs in school. But removing technology from learning 100% isn't the alternative. Those parents are still probably going to stick an unregulated, fully accessible iPhone in their kids hands where they're going on Instagram and tiktok with no media literacy skills. How is that any better?