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TR1. In Sweden, a teacher ran an experiment: no bans, no screen time limits, no lectures. He simply played documentaries for his students — and watched. Within a week, kids started putting their phones down on their own. A month later, they began asking questions that left adults speechless. Not out of rebellion — but awareness.
2. First documentary: “The Social Dilemma” (Netflix, USA). It shows how social media is designed not for connection, but for addiction. Kids watch it and realize: their emotions are a product. When a teen says, “Now I get why I spend 4 hours on TikTok” — there’s no need for rules. Disgust kicks in naturally.
3. Second: “Childhood 2.0.” It explains what’s happening to kids’ mental health in the age of Instagram and YouTube — in a way they actually understand. After watching, one girl said, “Now I know a like doesn’t mean I’m okay.” That moment changed how she acted online.
4. Third: “Screened Out.” About how screens affect the brain. No scare tactics — just brain scans, dopamine patterns, and alert responses. When kids see their brain reacts like an addict’s — they stop thinking they’re in control.
5. Fourth: “Plugged In” by Common Sense Media. Made for parents and kids. No lectures — just real talk. No rules — just relatable stories. It’s shown in Canadian schools. For the first time, kids ask: “What am I actually feeling when I scroll?”
6. Fifth: “Disconnected.” New and lesser-known — but incredibly powerful. Kids themselves talk about anxiety, anger, and burnout from 6 hours a day online. No psychologists. Just peers. That’s why it works.
No moralizing. Just awakening.
And a shift that’s not forced — but felt.
@trooper.mackenzieturner










