Beyond the screen: Restoring focus, connection, and deep learning in today’s classrooms
Have you noticed students who increasingly struggle to stay focused on tasks, find face‑to‑face interactions challenging, experience difficulty retaining new learning, and exhibit reduced stamina for sustained thinking? A growing body of evidence supports that the rise in the use of digital tools is reshaping students’ cognitive development, attention, and social skills. Research indicates that unbalanced technology use is impacting learning and well‑being in schools (Degen, 2025). The 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) revealed steep global drops in reading, math, and science scores (Degen, 2025). These declines occurred during the same period when daily screen time increased sharply, smartphone access became nearly universal, and digital tools replaced many paper‑based learning routines. Students who used digital devices for learning frequently performed significantly worse than peers who used them in moderation (Degen, 2025). Evidence emphasized the connection between academic decline and excessive technology use (Degen, 2025). Additionally, several studies in cognitive science and educational psychology documented that heavy digital use is associated with reduced sustained attention and declines in social skills (Carrier et al., 2015; Twenge, 2019; Odunowo, 2025; Degen, 2025). These researchers noted increases in distractibility, diminished working memory, and fewer opportunities for students to practice empathy, collaboration, and conflict resolution in real time (Carrier et al., 2015; Twenge, 2019; Odunowo, 2025; Degen, 2025).
While these findings are significant, they highlight a powerful opportunity: educators can intentionally shape learning environments to rebalance digital use with instructional practices that support healthy cognitive development and social connection. A next step to address the negative impact of overuse of digital tools is to identify practical Tier 1 strategies that help students regulate attention, engage more deeply with learning, and practice the social skills that flourish in low‑tech, relationship‑centered environments. Below are several evidence‑based strategies that, when incorporated into classroom routines, can support students’ development of attention, cognition, and social skills.
Short Daily Print-Based Reading Routines
Incorporate 10-15 minutes of print reading to support stronger comprehension, attention, and memory by reducing cognitive load and distraction (Clinton, 2019).
Return to Handwritten Notes
Handwritten notes deepen processing while improving encoding and long-term retention (Clinton, 2019).
Establish Single-Task Norms
Digital multitasking can harm attention, working memory, and task persistence. When students focus on a single task, it reduces cognitive switching costs and strengthens executive control (Rosen, 2018).
Incorporate Retrieval Practices
Exit tickets, quick quizzes, whiteboard checks, or Think‑Pair‑Share strengthen neural pathways that support memory retention and transfer (Agarwal & Bain, 2019).
Embed Movement
Two to three minute movement breaks (e.g., walk-and-talk or gallery walk routines) improve attention, working memory, and on-task behavior by increasing blood flow and supporting executive functioning (Daly-Smith et al, 2018).
Use Structured Discussion
Partner talk, Socratic seminars, and collaborative problem-solving support language development, reasoning, empathy, turn-taking, active listening, collaboration, and perspective-taking. They activate the neural networks tied to reasoning and emotional regulation through social interaction (Teachers Institute, 2026).
Teach Metacognitive Routines
Brief reflection prompts, goal-setting, and self-monitoring checklists improve planning, monitoring and self-regulation to improve attention, problem solving, and academic resilience (Fahrni et al., 2021).
Facilitate Cooperative Learning Structures
Jigsaw, Think‑Pair‑Share, team problem‑solving, and role‑based group tasks increase belonging, build collaboration skills and strengthen social-cognitive skills (Kyndt et al., 2018).
Embed Daily SEL Practices
Two to three minute emotional check-ins, naming emotions, identifying triggers, co-regulation, and brief empathy prompts improve self-awareness, emotional regulation, and interpersonal skills (Chiaro, 2026).
Conduct Community Circles
Weekly structured community circles with structured prompts improve peer connection, communication and trust. They enhance belonging and reduce social isolation (Acosta et al.,
2019).
Teach Perspective Taking
Role‑play, scenario analysis, and literature‑based discussions about character motivations and emotional inference strengthen social cognition and reduce interpersonal conflict (Okonofua et al., 2016).
Implement Digital Boundary Lessons
Direct instruction on healthy technology habits, online communication, and self-regulation in digital spaces improves online behavior and reduces social stress (Jæger, 2021).
Technology offers powerful tools for creativity, access, and connection; however, when used without balance, technology is increasingly shown to have detrimental impacts on students’ attention, cognition, and social development. Schools have the opportunity to prevent these unwanted effects by proactively adopting a more intentional, balanced approach to technology during instruction. By embedding research-supported, low-tech learning routines, educators can create learning environments that improve focus, deepen thinking, and rebuild face-to-face social skills students need to thrive.
References
Agarwal, P. K. & Bain, P. M. (2019). Powerful teaching: Unleash the science of learning. Jossey‑Bass.
Chiaro, C. (2026, January 30). SEL practices to use every day. TeachHUB.
Okonofua, J. A., Paunesku, D., & Walton, G. M. (2016). Brief intervention to encourage empathic discipline cuts suspension rates in half among adolescents. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113(19), 5221–5226.
Twenge, J. M. (2019). More Time on Technology, Less Happiness? Associations Between Digital-Media Use and Psychological Well-Being. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 28(4), 372-379.
For more information, contact Whitney Jones ([email protected]), Program Specialist, T/TAC at VCU.
Categories Behavior, Inclusive Practices