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Books in, screens out: some Finnish pupils go back to paper after tech push

Image by Anu Kuru from Pixabay

This autumn, pupils in the Finnish town of Riihimaki headed back to school with backpacks full of books after a decade of state-backed promotion of laptops and other digital devices in the classroom.

Finland’s public education system has gained global renown for its good results in recent decades and its readiness to try new teaching techniques. Until recently, many schools gave laptops for free to all pupils from as early as age 11.

But Finnish parents and teachers, as elsewhere, have become increasingly concerned over the impact of screens on children, reports Reuters.
So Riihimaki, a town of some 30,000 inhabitants 70 km north of Helsinki which since 2018 had stopped using most books in middle schools, is trying something different for the start of this academic year: going back to pen and paper.
“Young people are using phones and digital devices so much these days that we didn’t want school to be one of the places where children are only staring at screens,” said Maija Kaunonen, an English teacher at Pohjolanrinne middle school.
The constant distractions that come with the use of digital devices make many children restless and too flighty to focus.
“Most students just did the exercises as quick as they could so they could then move on to playing games and chatting on social media,” she told Reuters during a break in class. “And it took them no time at all to change tabs in the browser. So when the teacher came round to them, they could say: ‘Yes, I was doing this exercise’.”
Across Finland, children’s learning results have been slowly eroding in recent years, prompting the government to plan new legislation to ban the use of personal devices, such as phones, during school hours to cut back on children’s screen time.
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Author: Simon Weedy

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