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School board social media lawsuits: For too long we’ve sought individual solutions to a collective problem – The Conversation Indonesia

Four of the largest school boards in Canada are suing the companies behind popular social media apps Instagram and Facebook, Snapchat and TikTok. According to the Ontario boards, students are experiencing an attention, learning and mental health crisis because of prolific and compulsive use of social media products.

The school boards are collectively seeking over $4 billion in damages. Boards say theyre facing financial strain due to providing increased mental health supports for students as well as diverting resources to monitor social media related to threats or harassment.

Some observers have suggested it should be the responsibility of parents and teachers to control childrens social media use. But the problem is that for too long we have been trying to individualize solutions to a collective problem.

How social media negatively impacts kids mental health has been meticulously outlined in a new book by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt of New York University, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing and Epidemic of Mental Illness. In the book, Haidt discusses four ways social media is harming children:

Social deprivation, whereby the time children spend on social media has displaced opportunities to form more authentic personal connections;

Sleep deprivation, as social media use has been tied to reduced sleep duration and poorer sleep quality;

Attention fragmentation, as students are continually bombarded by messages and notifications, compromising their ability to focus.

Finally, addiction: tech companies are intentionally designing their social media apps in ways that exploit the vulnerabilities of children.

Haidt documents how internal documents revealed by former Facebook employee and whistleblower Frances Haugen show an employee presentation about why teens and young adults choose Instagram (owned by Facebook):

Teens decisions and behaviour are mainly driven by emotion, the intrigue of novelty and reward. While these all seem positive, they make teens very vulnerable at the elevated levels they operate on. Especially in the absence of a mature frontal cortex to help impose limits on the indulgence of these.

In Haidts analysis, its no mystery why we are seeing such sharp declines in youth mental health.

Read more: Excessive social media use during the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated adolescent mental health challenges

According to the 2021 Ontario Student Drug Use and Health Survey, the proportion of students reporting poor or fair mental health and the proportion of students experiencing serious psychological distress have both more than doubled since 2013.

As claimed by the Canadian school boards, it has largely fallen on schools to address these issues. To their credit, schools have tried to provide students with access to psychologists, social workers, youth workers and mental health specialists, but there is only so much they can do given their resource constraints.

According to data from the Annual Ontario School Survey, 95 per cent of schools report needing additional resources to support the mental health and well-being of students.

Boards allege the conduct of social media companies has been negligent and they are unfairly bearing the brunt of the learning and mental health epidemic caused by their apps.

Phones and social media use are also clearly having a detrimental impact on student learning: The most recent results of the OECDs PISA study show that math, reading and science scores have been plummeting over the last decade in Canada and other developed countries, due in large part to technology used for leisure rather than instruction, such as mobile phones.

This corresponds with a 2023 study led by researchers from the University of Michigan that tracked the phone use of 200 children (ages 11 to 17) over the course of a week.

It found that during the school day, the devices were used for educational purposes less than two per cent of the time. Rather, the most common uses of phones during school hours were social media (32 per cent), YouTube (26 per cent) and gaming (17 per cent).

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has expressed surprise at the lawsuit, stating: We banned cellphones in the classroom, so I dont know what the kids are using.

However, the reality is that Ontarios ban has been mostly symbolic. The reason for this is twofold. First is the way the ban was constructed: it allowed an exception for when the phones were being used for educational purposes.

Second, many students are unable or unwilling to comply with restrictions on their use something hardly surprising since social media apps are designed to be as addictive as possible. That means it has been left up to individual teachers to enforce restrictions in their classrooms, and resistant students arent provided with clear and consistent expectations. Meanwhile, some parents say their children need their devices.

While some say its up to individual children to fight these temptations, individual parents to better monitor their kids and individual teachers to get control of their classrooms, we must remember that the companies behind popular social media platforms are among the wealthiest on the planet. They use their enormous resources to render attempts at individual willpower futile.

Read more: 'Never-ending pressure': Mothers need support managing kids' technology use

Change may come from the courts or through the court of public opinion. Apart from whether companies are legally held responsible, reversing the harms being inflicted on our children by social media is going to require collective action among educators, parents and policymakers.

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School board social media lawsuits: For too long we've sought individual solutions to a collective problem - The Conversation Indonesia

Is social network X falling out of favour with Americans? – The Star Online

Things could be going better for X, the social network formerly known as Twitter. Elon Musk's platform is facing a further decline in user interest. In fact, according to an American study, X lost 30% of its users between 2023 and 2024.

Internet users no longer seem to have as much interest in using X, the social platform formerly known as Twitter, according to the latest Edison Research "Infinite Dial" report on digital media usage, conducted in January 2024 among 1,086 Americans aged 12 and over.

Indeed, the platform is experiencing a decline in usage. According to the report, 19% of Americans surveyed said they currently use the social network X (formerly Twitter) in 2024, compared with 27% in 2023. This is a significant drop, since according to Edison Research, this would translate into an estimated loss of 22 million users. The report counts 77 million users of the platform in 2023, compared to 55 million in 2024.

While X may be floundering, this is not the case for all social networks starting with Facebook, which, despite its less than stellar reputation, remains the most widely used social media in the United States. Around two-thirds of Americans over the age of 12 (63%) report using the platform. This figure has remained stable over the past two years. Instagram comes second with 44%, followed by TikTok (35%). The X platform is in seventh place, behind Pinterest, LinkedIn and Snapchat.

At generational level, 12- to 34 year-olds largely favour Instagram, followed by TikTok and Facebook. The older generation is more drawn to Facebook, which is still very present in the daily lives of 35- to 54-year-olds and 55+-year-olds.

X, on the other hand, has a harder time finding a place in the lives of users, across all generations. The platform lags far behind among 12- to 34 year-olds and 55+-year-olds, and comes in fifth place among 35- to 54-year-olds.

Other studies have already reported a slowdown for social network X. Apptopia, for example, reported a 13% drop in daily active users since Elon Musk's takeover. Meanwhile, SimilarWeb revealed a 14% drop in the social network's web traffic.

According to the Edison Research report, 82% of the US population aged 12 and over or around 235 million people currently ever use social media in 2024. AFP Relaxnews

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Is social network X falling out of favour with Americans? - The Star Online

Let’s be honest, social media isn’t driving a teen mental health crisis – City A.M.

Thursday 04 April 2024 5:05 am

By: Matthew Lesh

Matthew Lesh is Director of Public Policy and Communications at the Institute of Economic Affairs

Social media is an easy target for societys woes, but there is little hard evidence for its link with bad mental health, writes Matthew Lesh

A new book has ignited debate on social media this week. It is perhaps appropriate that the book, The Anxious Generation, is itself about social media.

Author Jonathan Haidt, a high-profile social psychologist, argues that childhood development has been disturbed by replacing play and in-person socialising with screen time, driving a youth mental health crisis. This book will undoubtedly bolster the campaign from those aiming to ban social media use for under-16s. Theres just one big problem: the evidence does not support Haidts apocalyptic claims.

In a review of The Anxious Generation in Nature magazine, psychology professor Candice Odgers warns that assertions about social media driving an epidemic of mental illness are not supported by science. Odgers says that research consistently finds a mix of no, small and mixed associations. Many studies find correlation rather than proven causation. Its quite possible that young people who use social media in an unhealthy manner already have mental health problems.

Haidt has responded to this criticism by listing the number of studies linking youth mental health issues with social media. But this is hardly exemplary of the scientific method. Science is not a democratic process, with whoever publishes the most papers winning the argument. Rather, its necessary to weigh the strength of each individual paper.

One such study that sought to review the reviews (that is, analyse metastudies in the field) found that the claimed links between social media and mental health are weak or inconsistent. One such review, from Amy Orben of the University of Cambridge, found links in both directions and claimed negative associations are at best very small. One study, for example, found that wearing glasses negatively impacted youth mental health more than screen time.

If the internet has a big negative impact, we expect to see worsening mental health globally. But thats not the case. The most reliable statistic to assess is teen suicide, as it addresses variations in self-reporting of mental health issues across time and place. On this front, there has been a clear increase in teen suicide over the last decade in the United States, but elsewhere, including the United Kingdom, teen suicide rates remain low or stable.

But even when you look at self-reported survey findings, the impact of social media is still far from clear. Matti Vuorre and Professor Andrew K Przybylski of Oxford University examined life satisfaction and internet uptake among 2m people in 168 countries over two decades. Looking at this broader data set and cross-national measures, unlike many narrower studies that claim negative effects, they find minor and inconsistent shifts in global mental health.

Its important not to oversimplify in this debate. Social media and screen time may have been harmful for some children. For many, however, technology is used to connect with friends and family, explore new ideas and build communities. One study by Andrew K Przybylski and Netta Weinstein, which analysed social media among English adolescents, found that moderate use may be good for mental health, while high levels had a measurable, small negative impact.

Technology is a tool that enriches our lives when used properly. The challenge for parents and schools is to ensure teens understand the risks and encourage positive behaviour. Broad generalisations and unrealistic knee-jerk bans will achieve little and could do much harm to healthy childhood development.

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Let's be honest, social media isn't driving a teen mental health crisis - City A.M.

Foreign Ministers mark NATO’s 75th anniversary, meet with Ukraine, Indo-Pacific partners, European Union – NATO HQ

Foreign Ministers concluded two days of talks in Brussels on Thursday (4 April 2024) with a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council, and another meeting with Indo-Pacific partners and the European Union. Thursday marked 75 years since NATOs founding. Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed the landmark, saying: "since 1949, we have been the strongest and most successful Alliance in history."

Speaking at the end of the ministerial, Mr Stoltenberg welcomed that Allies continue to step up with new support to Ukraine. In recent days, this includes nearly 600 million euros from Germany for the Czech-led artillery initiative; as well as 10,000 drones from the United Kingdom; more missiles and armoured vehicles from France; and just yesterday, a new package of aid from Finland worth 188 million euros, he said. He added: we need to do even more, and we need to put our support on an even firmer and more enduring basis. Allies have now agreed to move forward with planning for a greater NATO role in coordinating necessary security assistance and training for Ukraine.

Foreign Ministers also discussed the global implications of Russias war against Ukraine, including support for Moscow from China, North Korea and Iran. Allies were joined by Indo-Pacific partners Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and the Republic of Korea, as well as the European Union. Together, ministers discussed how to enhance cooperation in responding to cyber and hybrid threats, as well as new technologies and defence industrial production. As authoritarian powers increasingly align, NATO and its partners must stand united to defend a global order governed by law, not by force, said the Secretary General.

On Wednesday, NATO Foreign Ministers met to address NATOs support to Ukraine, as well as security challenges in the Alliances southern neighbourhood.

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Foreign Ministers mark NATO's 75th anniversary, meet with Ukraine, Indo-Pacific partners, European Union - NATO HQ

Press statement by President von der Leyen on a Resilience and Growth Plan for Armenia – European Union

Prime Minister Pashinyan,

Dear Secretary Blinken,

I am very glad to host this meeting together with the HR/VP Josep Borrell here in the Berlaymont in support of Armenia. We are delivering on a promise we made last October: The promise to stand shoulder to shoulder with Armenia, and at the same time, the promise to set a vision for the future of our partnership. This is what we are going to be discussing today.

This vision will be underpinned on the European Union side by a Resilience and Growth Plan for Armenia, EUR 270 million in grants over the next 4 years. We will invest in making the Armenian economy and society more robust and resistant to shocks. We will support your businesses, your talents, in particular your small and medium enterprises, so that we can help them to grow, to innovate and to access new markets. And we will invest in key infrastructure projects. For example in the Black Sea electricity cable that is a new transmission route full of opportunities. It can notably bring clean, renewable energy into Europe. We are ready to support it. In parallel, we will continue investing in Armenia's renewable energy production and in better interconnections with Georgia. We will also be exploring cross-border transport, if and when conditions allow. In this context, I welcome your Crossroads of Peace initiative Prime Minister. Finally, we come today with new measures for aviation and nuclear safety, and for trade diversification.

This support package we are presenting today builds on the success of an existing Economic and Investment Plan from the European Union for Armenia. It has already mobilised over half a billion in investments. I think this is great news. And now we can do even more with a fresh investment perspective. This is why we have recently launched an Investment Coordination Platform. So that we can jointly identify new projects, accelerate the pace and maximise the potential of our investments on the ground. Of course, the European Union will continue to support reforms in Armenia through advice, technical support and funding.

In this context, Prime Minister, I want to congratulate you for your efforts to carry out democratic reforms. And this, despite the challenges faced. I also welcome the measures that Armenia has taken against the circumvention of our sanctions against Russia. In particular, to make sure that lethal equipment and technologies do not end up in the hands of the Russian military. This shows that the European Union and Armenia are increasingly aligned in values and interests. Now, we are going to look today at the broader partnership. And let us take it forward with a new and ambitious Partnership Agenda between the European Union and Armenia. This is what we will be discussing in more detail in a moment.

We are not forgetting, Prime Minister, about the plight of the displaced Karabakh Armenians. The humanitarian situation of refugees in Armenia remains a priority. We have provided over EUR 30 million in support for the refugees since last September. We are ready to do more to support the long-term integration of refugees.

To conclude, I want to say how happy I am to receive both of you here in the Berlaymont. Because Europe and Armenia share a long and common history. The time has come to write now a new chapter. And I am very glad, Secretary Blinken, to count on the United States as a committed and like-minded partner in these efforts. We will continue to work all together for the future of Armenia, in a stable and prosperous South Caucasus region.

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Press statement by President von der Leyen on a Resilience and Growth Plan for Armenia - European Union