Navigating the ‘age of smartphones’, and the AI chatbot…
Just over a fortnight ago, the widely reported and much-discussed Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act 2026 gained Royal Assent, and as such, it will become law on June 29th of this year. While its application will inevitably vary across different educational settings, at Terra Nova we are particularly invested in the focus on Online Safety and digital wellbeing, and are delighted that the mandate for all schools in England to be “smartphone free” reinforces and supports what has been excellent, embedded practice at TN for a long while.
Terra Nova is smartphone-free for so many reasons: to manage children’s safe access to online content; to reinforce the need to be away from devices and enjoy fresh air when not in lessons; and to foster the ability to talk, engage and play with each other, in-person and ‘in the moment’. Aside from the well-documented and valid concerns about children’s excessive screentime or online activity, smartphones are fundamentally a tool for communication – and what better way to communicate than in real time, to the person or people in front of you?
WhatsApp announced this week the launch of “totally private, ‘incognito’ chats” with its AI Chatbot: essentially, a platform for anyone over the age of 13 to have a private, untraceable conversation with an AI, about anything. The potential danger of such a feature to vulnerable people, such as children with evolving judgment, is very real, and this addition to the WhatsApp platform only serves to strengthen the argument for tighter (and likely extended) age verification processes, also brought by the recent parliamentary Bill.
The bottom line is clear: children’s ‘coming of age’ for social media at 13 does not immediately equip them with the judgment and emotional skillset required to navigate what is essentially an adult world of largely unregulated, potentially misinformed content. It is often remarked by Future Schools that Terra Nova pupils are articulate, interesting and engaging, and we must seek to protect this legacy by ensuring that communication remains as far as possible with real people, in real time, and in the real world.