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Backlash Grows Over School-Issued Devices as Screens Flood U.S. Classrooms
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Backlash Grows Over School-Issued Devices as Screens Flood U.S. Classrooms

Photography & Words by Eleanor Cross May 26, 2026 2 MIN READ
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School‑Issued Devices Spark Nationwide Reassessment

Just a few years ago, districts across America raced to place a laptop in every student’s hands. Today, the tide has turned: school-issued devices are now blamed for overwhelming classrooms with screens, prompting a groundswell of resistance from parents, teachers, and lawmakers.

Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation’s second‑largest, unveiled a sweeping resolution that bars devices for pupils through second grade, caps daily screen exposure for older students, blocks YouTube on school hardware, and bans device use during lunch and recess. The board also ordered an audit of its edtech contracts, which the teachers’ union says total ↑ $1.6 bn.

Parents like Katie Pace, who limits her household to a single iPad, watch in frustration as their children arrive home after a 30‑minute bus ride already glued to a Chromebook, streaming videos and completing assignments on platforms such as Duolingo and Google Translate. “My daughter returned from school with a new screen addiction,” Pace told a recent board meeting.

“The Chromebook is just a world of distraction,” said Anna Soffer, a 6th‑grade teacher at a Los Angeles middle school.

The pandemic accelerated the push for universal device access; by the 2021‑22 school year, ↑ 96% of public schools reported issuing digital tools to students in need, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Yet many educators now argue that screens have become a crutch, substituting genuine instruction with endless apps.

Other districts are echoing LAUSD’s move. Fresno Unified plans to retrieve take‑home laptops from 40,000 elementary students to cut costly repairs, while Simi Valley will keep devices on campus after misuse surged. In Pennsylvania’s affluent Lower Merion, parents petitioned for an opt‑out option, only to be rebuffed, sparking a debate over the measurable impact of edtech on test scores.

State legislatures are joining the conversation: at least 14 states have introduced bills to limit screen time in schools, and a recent federal advisory warned that excessive digital exposure poses a public‑health risk. For a deeper look at the policy shifts, see Reuters.

Analysis by: Eleanor Cross
Chief Washington Correspondent
Global Gallery Dispatches

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