Parents and clinicians at Norwalk panel recommend simple rules, watch for behavior 'signals' and expand after-school options
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Clinicians and parents at a Norwalk School District panel recommended family strategies (accountability contracts, Tech Talk Tuesdays, removing phones from bedrooms), highlighted mental-health signals parents should watch for, and urged more after-school programming after a student reported about 40% lack activities.
Clinicians, parents and students at a Norwalk School District panel framed screen-time management as a family-and-community project, offering short-term practical steps that parents can start this week.
Emily Longo, director of family therapy at Silver Hill Hospital, urged parents to think of behavioral changes as "signals" that prompt calm, curious conversations rather than immediate punishment. "Parents, caregivers, you are the experts on your children and know your child the best," she said, listing changes such as sleeping more or less, eating shifts and social withdrawal as signs parents should notice and respond to.
Panelists recommended low-friction practices: Tech Talk Tuesdays (short weekly conversations about technology), family screen-time contracts and removing devices from bedrooms at night. Stephanie Peckham described a cellphone ban at one high school she follows and said it led to more face-to-face chatter at lunch and recess. A high-school student recommended voluntary phone storage during class and credited after-school clubs with providing tech-free community engagement; that student said about 40% of students "don't have anything to do after school," a statistic they described as surprising.
A parent who leads people analytics at a large company said mental-health costs rose for Gen Z entrants after 2020 and argued that early intervention in schools can reduce later workplace mental-health burdens. Panelists cautioned parents against trying to implement strict limits in the heat of conflict and recommended starting small so families can sustain new routines.
The panel closed with practical resources: pamphlets and family media-plan templates were available to take home, and district staff said schools can provide media-literacy support through library media specialists and digital coaches.
