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Teaching Values in the Age of Screens

A Silent Crisis in Education Sector

Dilshada Akhter by Dilshada Akhter
January 14, 2026
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The rapid growth of digital technology has transformed classrooms, homes, and human relationships. While screens have made information easily accessible, they have also quietly reshaped values, attention spans, and social behaviour—especially among children. This silent shift presents one of the most serious challenges to education today.

Children now grow up in a world dominated by mobile phones, social media, and instant entertainment. Exposure to screens begins at an early age, often replacing conversation, play, and reflection. As a result, educators increasingly observe impatience, reduced empathy, weak moral judgement, and declining interest in real-world learning. Knowledge may be increasing, but wisdom is fading.

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Education is not merely about literacy and numeracy; it is about character formation. Schools were once spaces where values such as respect, honesty, responsibility, and compassion were nurtured alongside academic skills. Today, these values are being overshadowed by virtual influence, peer pressure, and algorithm-driven content that prioritises popularity over principle.

The consequences are visible. Children struggle with self-discipline, conflict resolution, and emotional regulation. Teachers face classrooms where attention is fragmented and meaningful engagement is difficult. Parents, often overburdened, unintentionally use screens as substitutes for guidance and bonding.

This is not an argument against technology. Digital tools, when used wisely, can enrich learning and broaden horizons. The concern lies in imbalance. When screens replace storytelling, dialogue, outdoor play, and moral guidance, education becomes incomplete.

Schools must reclaim their role as centres of holistic development. Value education should not be limited to textbooks or special periods; it must be lived through daily interactions, teacher conduct, and school culture. Storytelling, group activities, community service, and reflective discussions help children internalise values in meaningful ways.

Equally important is parental responsibility. Children learn more from what adults practise than what they preach. A home environment that encourages conversation, reading, shared responsibilities, and ethical behaviour reinforces what schools strive to teach.

In an age where information is abundant but direction is scarce, value-based education is no longer optional—it is essential. If education fails to shape character, society will pay the price in the form of intolerance, selfishness, and social fragmentation.

The real measure of progress is not how digitally advanced our children are, but how humane, responsible, and thoughtful they become. Rebalancing screens with values is not a step backward; it is a necessary step forward.

The writer is a Teacher. akhterdilshada270@gmail.com

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