Teach Me, Teacher

#403 The Digital Delusion with Dr. Jared Cooney Horvath (pt.2)


Listen Later

On this week's Teach Me, Teacher we sit down with Dr. Jared Cooney Horvath — neuroscientist, educator, and author — to dive deep into one of the most urgent debates in education today: the role of technology in schools.

All of the discussion items in this episode are inspired by and directed by Jared's latest book: The Digital Delusion: How Classroom Technology Harms Our Kids' Learning — And How To Help Them Thrive Again — check it out here.

In this powerful conversation, Jared breaks down the myth of educational technology. His new book takes a rigorous, research-grounded view of why digital tools — once hailed as revolutionary — often fail to deliver on their promises and can actually hinder real learning.

Jared and I explore how technology went from a supplemental tool to a central feature of classrooms. Fueled by optimism, investment, and the idea that digital tools automatically mean innovation, schools adopted laptops, tablets, apps, and AI — often without deep evidence that these tools improve learning.

Drawing on decades of cognitive research, Jared explains how digital distraction — from multitasking to constant notifications — can disrupt memory, attention, and deep thinking. These are the very processes that real learningdepends on.

Rather than simply adding more tech, we talked about what happens when schools put teachers, relationships, and focused engagement back at the center of learning. Jared makes the case that most student-facing screens should be phased out — not because technology is inherently bad, but because its dominant role undermines learning outcomes and critical thinking skills

We also cover what better education actually looks like: classrooms where print media, discussion, reflection, and deep practice take priority — and where technology serves only highly specific, evidence-based purposes rather than driving instruction.

As schools grapple with stagnant achievement, reduced attention spans, and rising concerns about student well-being, this episode challenges the assumption that more technology equals better learning. It's time for educators, parents, and policy makers to rethink the role of ed tech — and that starts with honest conversations like this one.

Check out our previous discussion on the podcast here.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Teach Me, TeacherBy Teach Me, Teacher LLC

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

477 ratings


More shows like Teach Me, Teacher

View all
The Cult of Pedagogy Podcast by Jennifer Gonzalez

The Cult of Pedagogy Podcast

2,415 Listeners

Angela Watson's Truth for Teachers by Angela Watson

Angela Watson's Truth for Teachers

1,250 Listeners

10 Minute Teacher Podcast with Cool Cat Teacher by Vicki Davis

10 Minute Teacher Podcast with Cool Cat Teacher

274 Listeners

Melissa & Lori Love Literacy ® by Supported by Great Minds

Melissa & Lori Love Literacy ®

438 Listeners

Science of Reading: The Podcast by Amplify Education

Science of Reading: The Podcast

661 Listeners

Reach All Readers by Anna Geiger

Reach All Readers

214 Listeners

The Bright Morning Podcast with Elena Aguilar by Elena Aguilar

The Bright Morning Podcast with Elena Aguilar

572 Listeners

Stellar Teacher Podcast: A Podcast for Upper Elementary Teachers by Sara Marye, Literacy Teacher, Elementary Teacher

Stellar Teacher Podcast: A Podcast for Upper Elementary Teachers

205 Listeners

Teachers Off Duty by Bored Teachers

Teachers Off Duty

2,387 Listeners

Literacy Talks by Reading Horizons

Literacy Talks

58 Listeners

The Mel Robbins Podcast by Mel Robbins

The Mel Robbins Podcast

21,452 Listeners

The Unteachables Podcast by Claire English

The Unteachables Podcast

46 Listeners

The Knowledge Matters Podcast by Knowledge Matters Campaign

The Knowledge Matters Podcast

175 Listeners

In Moderation by Rob Lapham, Liam Layton

In Moderation

223 Listeners

Chalk & Talk by Anna Stokke

Chalk & Talk

81 Listeners