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Screens are Leaving Schools Fast, Though Some Students with Disabilities Rely on Them

Some students with disabilities rely on assistive technology to learn, and they worry it could be swept up in the movement to get screens out of schools.
A teenager with curly, brown hair sits next to her mother.
Soraya Martin (left) is a ninth grader in Concord, Calif., who has made strides as a creative writer and in her academics since she embraced assistive technology. She says her mom Heather Martin is her biggest advocate. (Jonaki Mehta/NPR)

CONCORD, Calif. — Ninth grader Soraya Martin is a bubbly, social teenager who recently found a new passion.

“I’m a very creative writer, I love to write stories for fun,” she says.

Stories come naturally to Soraya, but reading and writing don’t. That’s because she has dyslexia. “Academically, school has always been a really big challenge for me.”

Then last school year, she started using technology that allows her to do a number of things: dictate her writing rather than type, listen to books rather than read them on a page and take photos of notes on the board.

It changed everything. Instead of getting caught up in whether a word is spelled right, Soraya finds that with speech-to-text built into her school laptop, she can simply let the words flow from her brain out of her mouth.

“I started getting really good grades,” she says. “It made me feel like … I’m not stupid, I have so much to say and it just made me like ‘I can do this, I can do school and I can be good at it.”

This, her mom, Heather Martin, says, is the kind of promise screens hold for students like her daughter — students she worries are being forgotten in the nationwide backlash against screens in schools. Screens are increasingly being blamed for getting in the way of student learning: More than 30 states have banned cellphones in school. Some states have gone further with proposals or policies to entirely remove screens like laptops and tablets from classrooms. In late May, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued a surgeon general’s advisory warning of the “harms of screen use,” citing its effects on children’s health and educational outcomes.

Much of the pivot away from screens in schools has come from parents who are concerned screen use is getting in the way of their children’s learning — an argument Heather Martin hears in her own community in Concord, 30 miles northeast of San Francisco. She shares some of those concerns, but says, “Never once in the conversation has there been a discussion, except for me bringing it up with the other parents, about kids with disabilities.”

Advocates worry those students are also being left out of the national conversation.

Screen-time policy proposals are often “a blunt instrument”

Students with disabilities make up a quickly growing share of students in this country — there are more than 8 million of them. Many rely on assistive technology to get through the school day, including for note-taking, reading and writing. For example, blind and low-vision students may use screen reading or magnifying software to read. Others, like Soraya, use speech-to-text and audiobooks.

States including Alabama, Tennessee and Utah already have laws limiting screens that take effect as early as July.

“My concern is that that’s a really fast period of time for this to happen,” says Lindsay Jones, CEO of the Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST), an education research nonprofit that focuses on making learning environments accessible.

Jones points out that some of these laws do make exceptions to restrictions on screens for students with disabilities — often a line in the text mentions assistive technology. But she says that should be the bare minimum and worries many policy proposals are “a very blunt instrument.”

“They’ve moved so fast that we’ve really left our educators and our communities of people with disabilities this summer to figure it out,” she says. Perhaps with more time and input from disabled people, policies would better protect their rights, Jones adds.

Beyond concerns about state- and school-level bans on cellphones and screens, disability advocates point out that the shrunken U.S. Department of Education is far less equipped to enforce civil rights. Those rights include access to assistive technology for students with disabilities. The Trump administration also recently delayed a long-expected digital accessibility rule for public institutions, including schools.

“For some kids, the screen is their accessibility tool”

At Soraya’s high school in northern California, this past school year was the first that students’ phones were locked up in pouches for the entirety of the school day — as they are in many schools across the country. Heather Martin worries the phone ban could open the door to a broader ban on screens at her daughter’s school.

“A completely screen-free environment feels like it’s throwing the baby out with the bathwater,” she says. “It’s not looking at ‘screen free’ versus ‘accessibility free.’ And for some kids, the screen is their accessibility tool.”

As she talks about the change at her school, Soraya tenses up. “I hate them,” she says of the locked pouches. She says her phone isn’t just a distraction, it’s a safety net to call her parents if she has a panic attack, for example. And she feels singled out when she has to ask to get her phone out of its locked pouch for note-taking.

Soraya’s individualized education program (IEP), a legal document that outlines the accommodations and modifications she is supposed to receive at school, says she can use her phone for note-taking, along with other assistive technology. But because the cellphone ban is new, her teachers are still adjusting. Because she has several different classes and teachers throughout the day, she says it’s easy for some teachers to be unfamiliar with her accommodations.

This is the kind of “unintended consequence” Jones worries about as she considers a near future in which more schools move away from technology that she says has been game-changing for people with disabilities. When technology is used intentionally, she says, it can “actually allow us to create much more flexible environments, and those are really needed for people with disabilities.”

Jones’ organization, CAST, invented an educational framework called Universal Design for Learning that encourages educators to design their classrooms to account for the different ways students learn. For instance, a teacher might give a math lesson using blocks, a diagram and a video to help impress the same lesson upon diverse learners. Or perhaps class reading is provided as an e-book so students with low-vision can magnify the text, while those with dyslexia can listen.

As screen limits ripple through the nation’s schools, Jones hopes people with disabilities aren’t forgotten. “We need educators, we need people with disabilities, we need assistive technology providers,” to weigh in on how such policies are implemented in the classroom, says Jones. “That is going to be the best way forward for everyone to achieve their goals without trampling on people’s rights.”

For Soraya, using these kinds of tools has led her to embrace her learning differences. In fact, she just finished researching and writing a series of essays exploring how people with dyslexia learn. She has straight As for the first time in her life, but more importantly, she says she can express herself in a deeper, more meaningful way.

“I have so much more to say … It made me feel more confident in myself.”

Edited by: Nirvi Shah
Visual design and development by: LA Johnson

Transcript:

SCOTT DETROW, HOST:

Not long ago, the goal at many schools was to bring technology into classrooms. Now the pendulum has swung the other way. Dozens of states have already banned cellphones in school, and several are going further, getting all kinds of screens out of classrooms. But as NPR’s Jonaki Mehta reports, students with disabilities and learning differences feel left out of the conversation.

JONAKI MEHTA, BYLINE: Ninth grader Soraya Martin loves playing water polo, doing her friends’ nails, and recently, she’s found a love for writing.

SORAYA MARTIN: It’s my favorite subject. I’m a very creative writer. I love to just write stories for fun, but academically, school has always been a really big challenge for me.

MEHTA: Soraya goes to public school in Concord, about 30 miles northeast of San Francisco. When we sat down on her living room sofa, she told me she was diagnosed with dyslexia in first grade.

SORAYA: For me to sit down and read a book, I can’t see the words straight, they jumble up in my head. I’ll read a paragraph, and then I completely forget what I just read.

MEHTA: Soraya also has anxiety and ADHD. And it’s been a journey for her to accept she isn’t less intelligent than her peers. She just learns differently. And for that, she needs tools, like software on her computer that lets her dictate her writing.

SORAYA: I have speech-to-text. I have read aloud tools, audio books.

MEHTA: She only got a phone in seventh grade, but it was a game changer because she could take pictures of notes on the board. That way, she could spend time in class actually listening. Soraya says, until last year, she refused any assistive technology because like any kid, it just sucked to feel different. But once she started using things like speech-to-text more freely…

SORAYA: I started getting really good grades, and I had so much more to say. And it made me feel more confident in myself.

MEHTA: Disability advocates say it’s those kinds of gains that technology in the classroom can allow for some students.

HEATHER MARTIN: A completely screen-free environment feels like it’s throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

MEHTA: That’s Soraya’s mom, Heather Martin, who Soraya calls her biggest advocate.

MARTIN: It’s not looking at screen-free versus accessibility-free, and for some kids, the screen is their accessibility tool.

MEHTA: So far, Soraya’s school isn’t going screen-free, but this was the first year it banned cellphones. Teachers and students are still adjusting, but at times, it’s been stressful for Soraya, like when she’s had to ask for permission to get her phone unlocked to take notes. And Heather worries this could be a slippery slope toward no screens. She says that debate has heated up for parents in her community.

MARTIN: And never once in the conversation has there been a discussion, except for me bringing it up, about kids with disabilities or…

MEHTA: Heather shares the concerns around screens being a distraction. But she wants parents and policymakers to realize not every screen is the same for every child. Los Angeles Unified, the nation’s second-largest school district, is the first major district to require screen time limits. And states like Iowa, Utah and Alabama, already have laws on the books limiting screens, and some of them do have carveouts for kids with disabilities. But advocates have concerns about how thoughtfully assistive technology is being considered.

KATE BARTLEIN: We see how quickly things are moving in terms of removing screens from classrooms.

MEHTA: That’s Kate Bartlein of the National Center for Learning Disabilities. She says the jury is still out on what kind of screen use is good or bad and that nuance is often missing in the national debate.

BARTLEIN: Good instruction is good instruction. So having an educator who’s able to provide good instruction, whether that be through screens or not, can support learners of all different types.

MEHTA: Bartlein saw this with her own 11-year-old son who goes to school outside Minneapolis. He has dysgraphia, meaning he struggles with handwriting. And his teachers thought all he was capable of was writing simple words and sentences until they gave assistive technology a shot.

BARTLEIN: And using speech-to-text, he wrote this beautiful, impressive essay about his experience in an inclusive theater program and was able to use all of these incredible vocabulary words.

MEHTA: His teachers told Bartlein they were amazed he could write an essay at several grade levels above where he’d been before. This is the same kind of drastic change Heather Martin says she’s seen in Soraya since she started using assistive tools. For the first time in her life, Soraya has straight A’s, but more importantly, says Heather, her daughter can truly express herself now. Soraya pulls up an essay she’s working on at school that’s about a very relevant subject.

SORAYA: Can my mom just read it?

MEHTA: Sure.

SORAYA: Just read the introduction, this part.

MARTIN: OK. (Reading) School is supposed to be a place where everyone has a fair chance to learn. My main question from my research is why school expectations do not match how students with dyslexia actually need to be taught.

MEHTA: Both parents hope that as legislators and school leaders shape screen time policies, they remember the kinds of possibilities screens hold for kids like theirs. Jonaki Mehta, NPR News.

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