🇮🇪 A Newport Community Initiative
0 Newport families have joined

Give them the gift of a healthy brain.

Children who receive a smartphone before age 12 are 57% more likely to struggle with mental health by young adulthood.

Sapien Labs, 2025 • 100,000+ young people

Children who wait until secondary school have better focus, deeper sleep, and stronger real-world relationships.

The window is now.

This is happening across Ireland. Right now.

This isn't about Silicon Valley or American statistics. This is about Irish children, children in our children's class.

In a typical class of 24 children:

  • 17 are using apps designed for ages 13+
  • 15 say their parents can't see what they're doing online
  • 10 already own a smartphone

Based on CyberSafeKids 2025 data for Irish 8-12 year olds

83%
of Irish primary school children use devices in their bedrooms
CyberSafeKids 2025
63%
are allowed to use them overnight, while they should be sleeping
CyberSafeKids 2025
50%
of 8-12 year olds say they themselves spend too much time online
CyberSafeKids 2025
4%
lower reading and maths scores for children who owned phones at age 9
ESRI / Growing Up in Ireland

Your child probably agrees with you

Half of Irish children aged 8-12 already feel they spend too much time online. They're not fighting you on this. They're waiting for permission to step away.

CyberSafeKids Survey, 2025

What teachers across Ireland are seeing

A national study by Mary Immaculate College surveyed 107 classes and 2,000+ pupils across Ireland:

"The class of junior infants who began school in 2024 has been the most challenging class I have had in 27 years of teaching."

This is a national pattern, not unique to any one school.

Their brains are under construction

Between ages 5 and 16, your child's brain is building the neural architecture that will serve them for life. Screens are reshaping that architecture, and not always for the better.

🧠

Prefrontal Cortex

Controls impulse control, decision-making, and sustained attention. Still developing until the mid-20s. Heavy screen use is associated with premature thinning of this critical region.

ABCD Study, 11,875 children

Dopamine System

Screens deliver unpredictable dopamine hits (likes, notifications, game rewards). This can desensitise the reward system, making normal activities feel boring.

Harvard Medical School

🎯

Attention Networks

Average human attention on screens has dropped from 2.5 minutes (2004) to 47 seconds (2024). Children are building brains that cannot sustain focus.

Gloria Mark, UC Irvine

The Critical Windows

Ages 5-7

Foundation Building

Core attention systems are developing. Children learn to sustain focus through play, conversation, and exploration. Screens train the brain to expect constant stimulation.

Ages 8-10

The Critical Window

Your child's age group. Social wiring is being established. The brain is highly plastic, and highly vulnerable. This is when habits become neural pathways.

Ages 11-12

Peer Pressure Peak

When most children receive smartphones. Research shows this is also when the damage is most significant: the developmental gap between impulse control and reward-seeking is widest.

Ages 13-16

Identity Formation

Social media creates feedback loops of comparison, validation-seeking, and anxiety. The prefrontal cortex won't fully mature until the mid-20s.

The Evidence is Clear

The younger a child receives their first smartphone, the worse their mental health outcomes:

Age of First Smartphone Girls Distressed/Struggling Boys Distressed/Struggling
Age 6 74% 42%
Age 10 61% 43%
Age 13 52% 36%
Age 18 46% 36%

Sapien Labs Global Mind Project, 2025 · 100,000+ young adults across 65 countries

48% of girls who received smartphones at ages 5-6 report suicidal thoughts as young adults, compared to 28% who received one at age 13.

The Research Behind This

These findings come from peer-reviewed research at leading institutions:

Trinity College Dublin UCD Oxford Cambridge Harvard NYU ESRI
  • Sapien Labs (2025) · 100,000+ young people across 65 countries
  • ABCD Study · 11,875 children tracked from ages 9-10 through adolescence
  • Growing Up in Ireland · 19,000+ children since 2008
  • The Lancet Psychiatry Commission (2024) · Global youth mental health review
  • CyberSafeKids (2025) · 9,000+ Irish children surveyed

What we wish someone had told us

These aren't warnings. They're lessons from parents and researchers who learned the hard way.

😴 Screens in bedrooms steal sleep, and sleep deprivation harms everything else
🎯 Attention is a skill that needs practice. Fragmented content undermines it
🧠 Dopamine hits from screens can make real life feel boring by comparison
👥 Social comparison on Instagram and TikTok is hardest on developing identities
📚 Children who owned phones at 9 scored lower on reading and maths at 13
💬 47% of children don't tell parents when something online upsets them

We can't undo what we didn't know. But we can act on what we know now.

The Newport Commitment

Change happens when families act together. When your child says "but everyone has one," you can say "not in Newport."

47
Newport families have committed

Families from Junior Infants to 6th Class

What the Research Says Works

-1.24 hrs
Screen-free mealtimes reduce daily screen time by over an hour
-1.6 hrs
No screens in bedrooms reduces daily screen time by 1.6 hours
4x
Your own screen habits matter 4x more than household rules

Sources: UCSF Study; Growing Up in Ireland Conference 2025

The Commitment

No smartphone until secondary school

A basic phone for calls and texts is fine. But no smartphone with internet, apps, and social media until they leave primary school.

Every year you delay improves outcomes.

Based on research by Jonathan Haidt (NYU), Jean Twenge (San Diego State), and adopted by families across Ireland through Smartphone Free Childhood Ireland.

Make the Commitment

Join other Newport families. This isn't just about setting limits for your child. It's about committing to model healthy screen habits yourself.

This is the commitment. One decision that protects their developing brain.

By signing below, I commit to giving my child the gift of a childhood where their brain can develop fully, their attention is their own, and their relationships are real.

Sign with your finger (mobile) or mouse (desktop) to confirm your commitment

Your signature is stored securely. Only aggregate numbers (not names) are displayed publicly.

This works. It's already happening in Ireland.

The Greystones Model

In Greystones, Co. Wicklow, parents across 8 primary schools came together and agreed: no smartphones until secondary school. This removed the peer pressure that makes individual family decisions so hard.

The model has since spread to Clare, Dublin, and Waterford. Minister for Education Norma Foley cited it when announcing national guidelines.

Newport can be next.

505 Irish schools registered with Smartphone Free Childhood Ireland
11% drop in under-13 smartphone ownership in Ireland (2025)

Fill the space with something better

Taking away screens creates a vacuum. Fill it with experiences that build capable, connected children. Newport and Mayo offer everything you need.

🏃

Outdoor Play

Clew Bay, Croagh Patrick, Newport's forests and beaches. Unstructured time outside builds bodies, brains, and resilience.

Sports & GAA

Team sports teach cooperation, resilience, and physical confidence. Newport GAA and local clubs provide community.

🎵

Music & Arts

Learning an instrument, drawing, drama: these build focus, creativity, and the ability to tolerate frustration.

📚

Reading

Books build attention spans, vocabulary, and imagination. Read together. Let them see you reading.

🎲

Board Games

Strategy, patience, taking turns, losing gracefully. These are life skills that screens don't teach.

💭

Boredom

Let them be bored. Boredom is the birthplace of creativity and self-direction. Don't fill every moment.

Simple Rules That Work

  • No screens during meals · saves 1.24 hours and protects family conversation
  • No screens in bedrooms · saves 1.6 hours and protects sleep
  • Screens off one hour before bed · let the brain wind down
  • Homework and chores first · screen time is earned, not default
  • Tech-free Sundays · regular disconnection for the whole family
  • Parents model it too · they're watching what you do, not what you say

Resources

Recommended Reading

  • The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt
  • iGen by Jean M. Twenge, Ph.D.
  • Glow Kids by Nicholas Kardaras, Ph.D.
  • Reset Your Child's Brain by Dr. Victoria Dunckley