Dateline: 20 March 2026
Here in the United Kingdom in 2026, education centres are rapidly moving from the cold, dank days of winter with what now feels like lightning speed. With spring sunshine abounding, the mood can’t help but be optimistic for the future beyond the Easter break. In school and our wider town, the shorts are out, the sculls on the river, the rollers flattening the cricket squares, there’s a smile on the faces and a skip in the step. Put simply, we are on the seasonal helter-skelter, gravity is doing its work, and we’ve just got to hang on tight. How can we wrest back control?
I shared a speaker platform on Wednesday with Sir Anthony Sheldon, looking forward to a world which has chosen for its children a smartphone-free life, whilst being up-skilled in understanding how to use Artificial General Intelligence to keep control of the new technologies that threaten to accelerate the 4 phase of revolution 10 times faster than the stage the UK led, that third stage we know as the Industrial revolution. It’s been extraordinary that, in a rash societal experiment, whilst we’d never provide our children with unlimited access to alcohol, many have been given screens to enjoy gaming with, but underpinned by technology built to make the consumption of social media deeply more addictive. Across the globe, countries aren’t just banning smartphones; they’re retreating to books, parents, and handwriting, in an effort to regain the cognitive development expected of teenagers and young adults now deemed perhaps a ‘lost’ generation.
Anthony extended the rollercoaster, accelerating us through what AGI would bring humanity within most of the current living population’s lifetimes. Wherever computing power has been achieved so far, quantum computing takes us into a new dimension where ideas we could never have conceived arise spontaneously as a result of algorithms working in ways yet to be imagined. This all seems very threatening, and it is, and the challenge is to determine whether, as humans, we have the capability to respond and react at 10 times the speed seen to date?
Being the optimist I am, I see the challenges now faced are as unexpected as they’ve been in the past. I’m reading articles talking about Generation Alpha being unable to process in the traditional ways of the past, doomed as their lives have been, completely changed by the never-ending screen doomscrolling, becoming unmanageable at home and at school. It’s said that traditional discipline – punishment, timeouts, taking things away- doesn’t work; their brains need explanation and collaboration, not authority. These kinds of sweeping statements seem to ignore that what is now being described is actually teenage adolescence, which has always been thus. What’s changed is the growing impotence of the grown-ups around the children to make the difference, change the record and get cracking on including their young, getting their engines running and helping them ‘crack-on’.
We’ve known we needed to do this throughout the written history of humanity. Some 2,400 years ago, the Greek philosopher Aristotle introduced two different ways of reasoning: syllogism, logical reasoning, and phronesis, often translated as practical wisdom or prudence, referring to the ability to make sound judgments and decisions based on moral understanding and practical experience. At the conference yesterday, involving heads, bursars, operations managers, and academics from the independent sector, we saw the challenges but also the opportunities and the conditions that need to be provided to bring children and young people in from the digital wilderness that might otherwise consume them.
Over the last few days, I’ve seen and heard of our athletes at Claires Court rowing in the School’s Head on the tideway, playing in the U15 Rugby RFU Vase final, gymnasts being placed in national finals, whilst witnessed amazing A level Drama performances, hearing of musical concerts for young and old, fancy dress and mufti days, Year 7 solving the heinous crimes committed during Science Week and all. The reality of school life with me is both families severely limiting screen time and making sure the absence created is tolerated and alternative solutions found, and school safely introducing through education programmes and understanding of AI and its uses and usefulness. In short, the grown-ups are capable of exercising their phronesis, making practical choices and creating healthy environments. It’s ‘Rat Park’ revisited, a 1970s experiment which revolutionised the understanding of addiction by highlighting the importance of environmental richness and social connections, shifting the focus from solely biological explanations to include social determinants of health. With only morphine solution available, rats quickly drank themselves to death, yet when toys etc. were added, the rats ignored the drugs and lived a much healthier life.
Ultimately, the goal is to shift the narrative from “screen doom scrolling” and “digital wilderness” to intentional, human-centred engagement. By exercising our own phronesis, we can bridge the gap between traditional authority and the collaborative needs of modern adolescence. Whether it is through partition or Cup Finals, the arts or forensic sciences, we must provide the “toys” in the park that make the addictive lure of the digital cage lose its appeal.
As we navigate this seasonal helter-skelter, we must remain the optimists who believe that the challenges of AGI can be met with the same resilience as the Industrial Revolution. By up-skilling our children to understand these new technologies while simultaneously retreating to the grounding influence of books, handwriting, and face-to-face parenting, we ensure they are not a “lost” generation. We have the tools to change the record; now, it is simply time to get our engines running and help our young people truly crack on.










