Swedish government announced that the country’s schools would be going back to basics, emphasizing skills such as reading and writing, particularly in early grades. After mostly being sidelined, physical books are now being reintroduced into classrooms, and students are learning to write the old-fashioned way: by hand, with a pencil or pen, on sheets of paper. The Swedish government also plans to make schools cellphone-free throughout the country https://undark.org/2026/04/01/sweden-schools-books/
Why Swedish Schools Are Bringing Back Books

Amid declining test scores, the country has pivoted away from screens and invested in back-to-basics school materials.

Undark Magazine
In the age of stupid LLMs and social media like TikTok or Insta this move is very important to teach kids fundamentals that can last longer than any tech bro's bullshit apps ever will. Well done, Swedish government.
@nixCraft Yeah, social media is a failed experiment. Time to move on. The nordic countries are way ahead of the curve. As usual 👍
@nixCraft I feel like this is an over correction. The way to go is kinda in the middle - I think.
@agowa338 @nixCraft I feel like this is actually a pretty decent middle ground? Nobody is stopping them from using technology outside of school, they're just having dedicated time to learn how to do things without it during the day.

@salkeld @nixCraft

Well I wouldn't be able to type with 10 fingers if it wasn't for school forcing us to learn it. And in hindsight I'm kinda thankful for that.

And I'm sure a lot of people in class benefitted from all of these "search stuff on the internet for your presentation" with being guided to source validate and double check stuff to teach critical thinking and media competency.

Also we did 3d CAD design and entry level programming in school too, so...

@agowa338 @nixCraft Admittedly, I was focusing a lot on the 'particularly in early grades' part of the post, which I think is really important. As students get older, I agree, the wider the set of the skills they learn at school, the better.

@salkeld @nixCraft

well we also had some guided "computer lectures" in 1st and 2nd grade too. But tbh I can't remember what they were about. Just that I kinda enjoyed them...

@agowa338 @salkeld @nixCraft we had typing class in grade 4 or 5.

Learning to write "properly" prior to getting into keyboards has a lot of merit!

@krupo @salkeld @nixCraft

I'm not against the need for teaching these skills too. I just feel like a full ban as the wording "cellphone-free schools" suggests is just equally bad just in the other direction...

@agowa338 @salkeld @nixCraft There is perhaps some nuance that is being lost. Nowhere does it suggest the modern equivalent of Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing or computer labs with office and engineering software are being removed. It is the ban of cell phones and a move back to writing and reading primarily on physical media, away from laptops and tablets
@agowa338
Their is still things to search on the internet, excluding slop?
@salkeld @nixCraft
@nixCraft Wonderful. Skilled use of cellphones can then be taught in a class dedicated to doing it, with provided cellphones: Blocking, safety, anti-spam, how to switch off google's invasiveness, block tracking, etc. etc.

@nixCraft I've been watching this happen online for a decade now. I know it isn't the student's faults. It's not even the fault of the education system.

Walls of text with no capitalization, no punctuation, no delineation between sentences or paragraphs. You have to read it four times to understand it.

Here in the US, our government has been deliberately undercutting our education system since the 1980s, it's no wonder our literacy rate is tanking.

@nixCraft

Subjectively, I feel like I learn better with books, and writing stuff down with a pencil. I'm old, so it could be bias, but tech is distracting to me in all the wrong ways. I'm very comfortable with it. It just feels like an abstraction layer that gets in the way of learning.

@lxskllr @nixCraft I feel like I read a study where this exact thing was proven many years ago.
@nixCraft meanwhile the liberal party’s fixation with schools has completely shattered the learning by introducing neoliberal for profit privately run schools. They are still in power and behind this attempt at distracting from their core failure
@nixCraft Whole country really said alright everyone, back to paper and no phones 😭
@nixCraft very positive changes. Kids deserve their freedom from cellphone parenting and they also deserve to be taught basic skills like writing. After offering several generations of kids to the altar of digitalisation without actually teaching any relevant tech skills (usage of US tech giant cloud platforms is not really a relevant skill), maybe we finally can start to think about future with clearer heads.
@nixCraft this is the best way to teach children's.. Cellphone free education😍

@nixCraft

That's a plan with teeth.
Meanwhile, the U.S. slips back into functional illiteracy.

@nixCraft my main concern is simply how quickly analog materials become dated. I don't think that's a problem, per se. Rather, something to be managed around.

@carlsetzer We solved this problem ages ago, with new and revised editions.
Paper can be recycled easily and even if thrown out, it decomposes way quicker then anything found in any electronic device...

@nixCraft

@nixCraft I actually worked in an EdTech startup 10 years ago. Even my company recommended using screens for learning for a maximum time of just 20 mins per day, just 2 days per week. Their ethos was that it was the teacher’s job to teach, in the old fashioned way on a board, that screens should never replace that. EdTech should only be used to as tool to help teachers and students, not a way for education systems to cut costs and reduce the role of teachers.

@nixCraft Ahh the convergence of when too much is too much, and too little, too little.

What is a sustainable range, and can it be taught in early stages of development in order produce sustainable adults?

#EducationRevolution

@nixCraft I think taking away the emergency communication devices from all schoolchildren is probably bad, actually.
@DL_Draco_Rex
only if you are in the US.
Adults will remain in possession of their communication devices.
@nixCraft
@pixie @nixCraft I forgot that I live in Hell and I genuinely have no idea if the kind of situations that can be fixed by a child having a cellphone even happen in other countries.
@nixCraft Good for you, Sweden, caring about the future of your children. I hope Finland goes down the same road soon.
@nixCraft this is actually a good thing and American schools need to follow suit.
@nixCraft I still remember the smell of my favorite history book in 8th grade. It was like reading about the greatest adventures in a story book that smelled like old leather. I swear it did. history books are what made me fall in love with history, the human side of it.

@nixCraft

> Swedish government announced that the country’s schools would be going back to basics, emphasizing skills such as reading and writing,

A very bad idea.

There has been a lot of work on effective education and "back to basics" is a dog whistle for "throw it all away" and stop the "liberal indoctrination " of children

A shame, but Sweden has always been a bit like that