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Smartphone ban: Meet the north London parents shunning devices for their children

In north London, parents at a Jewish primary school are calling for smartphone-free childhoods

March 20, 2024 11:03
Emma Ross
Emma Ross, pictured with her three sons, heads up Eden Primary's Smartphone Free Childhood Group (Photo: Emma Ross)

ByElisa Bray, Elisa Bray

7 min read

It’s going to be like smoking back in the day,” says Talya Ressel. “I worry that we’re going to wake up in ten years and say, ‘How could we have let our children go on smartphones or social media, how could we have given them that unfettered access?’”

A psychotherapist who has worked with families for many years, Ressel is backing the burgeoning movement of parents wanting to ban their children from owning smartphones until they are 14 and accessing social media before 16.

Launched by two mothers, Smartphone Free Childhood has spread like wildfire with a WhatsApp group joined by thousands that has since splintered into local ones, and individual schools. And in north London, the Jewish Eden Primary is blazing the trail.

Finding the confidence to say 'no' can help to create a new social norm (Photo: Pixabay)[Missing Credit]

An overwhelming 97 per cent of 12-year-olds in Britain have a smartphone, and ample research shows that these highly addictive devices are linked to the epidemic rise in teenage anxiety, depression, self-harm and suicide. In his new book The Anxious Generation, leading American social psychologist Jonathan Haidt warns of the changing nature of childhood and the rise of mental illness since smartphones were popularised in 2010.