We failed to prepare kids for social media by focusing on restriction instead of education.
Can we do better with AI by giving them the skills they need for a digital world?
Key points
- AI is changing how young people learn, create, and solve problems.
- Restriction without education leaves kids unprepared for digital life.
- Kids need help understanding AI’s strengths and weaknesses, not just avoiding the tools.
- Digital literacy builds judgment and critical thinking through practice.
We didn’t prepare kids for social media. Instead, we argued about screen time and whether “social media is good or bad.” We treated mobile phones and social media as if they were interchangeable. We got scared and overlooked what our kids really need: the preparation to handle the digital world they are growing up in. The problem is not the tools. We left most kids to figure out this new environment on their own. We gave them access to powerful systems without teaching them how those systems worked, what they rewarded, or how to think critically about what they were seeing and sharing. Now AI is here, and it is developing at a pace that makes social media look slow by comparison. Its implications reach far beyond distraction and social comparison. AI is already reshaping how students search, write, create, solve problems, and even seek companionship. Are we going to make the same mistake again? We will if we ask, “How do we protect kids from AI?” when we should be asking, “What do kids need to understand so they can safely navigate an AI‑saturated world?” Protection without preparation is an illusion. The minute the restrictions disappear, the kids are on their own. Right now, we’re preoccupied with picking up pennies in front of a steamroller. Bans, filters, and one‑off rules feel protective but do little to help kids navigate a world where AI is built into search, schoolwork, jobs, relationships, and everyday decisions. The only real safety comes from digital literacy, critical thinking, and practice, not from pretending we can keep them off the road.
Why the Phone Bans Miss the Point
The recent enthusiasm for cell phone bans is easy to understand. Cell phones are an easy target. The majority of U.S. adults support bans to reduce distractions, improve mental health, and curb cyberbullying. Teachers report calmer classrooms and fewer visible distractions. But the promised academic and mental‑health payoffs have not materialized (Figlio & Özek, 2025; Goodyear et al., 2025). The biggest problem with the cellphone ban debate is that it distracts us from a much more important question: “Are we teaching kids the skills they need to manage digital life for themselves?”We focused on devices instead of literacy
Why AI Is Different

Protecting kids from AI is impossible. Teaching judgment and digital literacy is not. Photo: Alfred Evelina's Images
Protection Without Preparation Fails
Bans are appealing because they are visible, concrete, and easy to explain. They let adults feel like they are doing something. But banning a tool does not teach a child how to evaluate it, question it, or use it wisely. Bans also do not help them practice self‑regulation. If we respond to AI by trying to block or demonize it, we might reduce some use in the short term. The bigger risk is that young people will be left unprepared for a future in which AI is embedded in school, work, media, and daily decision‑making. In practice, we can:- Make AI discussable by treating it as something you explore together instead of a secret or a sin.
- Explain the basics so kids understand how AI learns, how it can sound confident and still be wrong, how it can amplify bias, and how it can mimic social cues.
- Redesign assignments and expectations so that we assess thinking instead of output.
- Be concrete about where the line is for ethical use, helping young people develop judgment, not compliance.
Dr. Pamela Rutledge is available to reporters for comments on the psychological and social impact of media and technology on individuals, society, organizations and brands.