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Beyond Screen Time: Teaching Students to Think, Feel, and Act in a Digital World

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Educators are adapting to a changing digital landscape in which students regularly consume, create, and respond to media. Integrating emotional intelligence, digital citizenship, and media literacy enables students to think critically, manage their emotions, and engage responsibly online.

The Willows Community School has used RULER for over 10 years and is recognized as a RULER Spotlight School. This recognition is given to schools that have built more emotionally intelligent communities through innovative practices rooted in RULER's skills, tools, and principles. Lily Davis, director of programming at The Willows Community School, brings this framework to life by using RULER to teach media literacy to elementary and middle school students.

What should educators know about teaching media literacy and emotional intelligence together?

It’s complex and evolving. Before we discuss that, it is important to understand how they work together. Media literacy is the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, create, and act using all forms of communication (National Association for Media Literacy Education). Emotional intelligence, according to YCEI, is the ability to navigate our own and others’ emotions to achieve meaningful goals. It involves the skills of recognizing, understanding, labeling, expressing, and regulating emotions. Digital citizenship is responsible, ethical, and safe use of technology. Combined, all three become an interdependent skill set that students need to navigate a complex and emotionally charged digital world.

There will always be voices who think we should move faster and expose students to more, and others who want to share and expose less. Our job as educators is to find the balance and teach the imperative skills to approach media, however it evolves, with critical thought and emotional attunement. Media literacy and emotional intelligence are not free-standing lessons—they should be embedded in everything we do as educators.

Media literacy and emotional intelligence should be embedded in everything we do as educators.

Lily Davis
Director of Programming, The Willows Community School

What is an example of a lesson you’ve taught where students connect emotional intelligence and digital citizenship?

In fifth grade, we taught a Halloween lesson called “My Culture is Not a Costume,” which addressed situations where a person takes something from a culture that is not their own without showing respect or understanding, and usually without permission. We explored costumes as media—that is, messages in images, words, or sound that are communicated to people in other places. A parent approached me and mentioned that her daughter was so happy that this concept was acknowledged at our school, with the hope that she wouldn’t see any more examples during the season. Sometimes, we aren’t aware of the powerful connections students make and take with them outside the classroom.

Classroom takeaway: Media literacy isn’t just about analyzing content—it’s about understanding impact, identity, and emotions in real-world contexts.

What challenges arise when teaching media literacy and AI concepts to students?

In middle school, we were discussing how AI is taught and how an algorithm is formed. My teaching partner and I predicted that students would be “shocked” or “surprised” at how consciously guided we are by the content we consume. We had a whole lesson ready based on that assumption.

The students reacted completely differently than we had thought. At this point in their lives, they were completely unconcerned about algorithms, or bubbles, or any other Big Brother terminology. As adults, we've watched social media algorithms reshape consumerism and deepen societal polarization. Naturally, we worry about how this shift controls the information we receive. Our students, who know no other way, remain unfazed by the algorithm's power. We learned that different generations have different points of view about this topic and that we should let students guide us.

Instructional insight: Start with students’ perspectives. Assumptions about what will resonate can limit engagement.

How should educators respond to real-time digital conflicts that impact the classroom?

We handle these issues from two angles: curriculum and classroom climate and culture. For curriculum, we use relevant lessons from Common Sense Media on Digital Citizenship or read a book that highlights feelings from conflict. We hold a class meeting where students sit in a circle to create a safe space to share, connect, and listen. Sometimes, we address the issue directly, share that we’ve heard concerns about technology at home, and talk through them together. Other times, we share personal stories of similar experiences and work through the issues together.

Practical strategy:

  • Use curriculum-aligned resources
  • Reinforce classroom norms
  • Facilitate open dialogue
  • Model vulnerability and reflection

What are parents noticing about their children’s digital lives at home?

Parents are overwhelmed with how fast all of this is developing. They are understandably preoccupied with controlling technology use and exposure. They notice the growing need to restrict technology in their child’s bedroom, reduce access to social media, and avoid exposure to AI. Parents are hungry for guidance on how to help students independently manage technology themselves and hope much of the learning will take place at school.

Implication for schools: There is a clear opportunity for schools to lead not only in instruction, but also in equipping families with strategies and language.

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Author

Erin Brough, PMP, MBA
Program Director, Communications

To facilitate interdisciplinary research and collaboration, Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence (YCEI) is nested within Yale Child Study Center (YCSC), which serves as the Department of Child Psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine. The missions of YCSC and YCEI converge to improve children’s mental health and well-being, with an overarching aim of fostering an emotionally healthy society. At YCEI, we conduct research and offer training that support people of all ages in developing emotional intelligence skills. Together with YCSC faculty, staff, and trainees, we connect science to practice—from prevention and promotion to intervention and care.

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Emotional Intelligence Meets Media Literacy in Action

Watch a featured portion of the presentation by Lily Davis and Brian Tousey, Head of Media Literacy at The Willows Community School, to RULER educators to learn how to integrate emotional intelligence and media literacy in classrooms, with practical strategies you can use right away.

Watch the lesson overview

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