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Following high-profile reports from educators in Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States, parenting author Lawrence Martin publishes a practical day-by-day framework for families seeking to reduce children's screen use without removing devices
BELFAST, Ireland & LONDON - Michimich -- As teachers across multiple countries describe an escalating screen time crisis among schoolchildren — most recently in a widely-circulated Irish Times investigation published earlier this month — parenting author Lawrence Martin has released Screens Down, Family Up: The 7-Day System to End Screen Battles, a structured day-by-day guide that helps families reduce children's screen time without taking devices away.
The release comes amid growing public concern over the impact of unmonitored device use on children's attention spans, sleep, and academic performance. In an Irish Times article published May 12, 2026, primary and secondary school teachers — speaking on condition of anonymity — described pupils arriving at school "exhausted" after late-night phone use, with one Limerick principal stating that parents are "reluctant to confront the issue" and another teacher saying that students who once "transformed before her eyes" had become "sullen, uninterested" after the introduction of a mobile phone.
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The teachers' accounts echo data published by major research bodies. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, teenagers spending four or more hours daily on screens report anxiety symptoms at 27.1 percent and depression symptoms at 25.9 percent — more than double the rates among teens with less daily screen time. Separately, Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago reported in 2025 that children in the United States average 21 hours of recreational screen time per week, against an average parental ideal of nine. The Pew Research Center reported in January 2025 that 86 percent of U.S. parents of teens identify managing screen time as their single greatest parenting concern.
Screens Down, Family Up offers parents a structured seven-day plan covering ages three through sixteen. The book includes word-for-word conversation scripts for moments parents typically find difficult — bedtime device handover, car-ride demands for phones, and the "all my friends have one" pressure — alongside more than fifty age-sorted screen-free activities and printable family agreements.
"Parents aren't failing," Martin said. "They're trying to raise children in a world designed to capture and hold attention. The book gives them a system, not advice — day-by-day, conversation-by-conversation, with the exact words to use when their child pushes back."
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Martin's framework is structured around progressive change rather than complete elimination of devices, an approach he attributes to feedback from families during a development period that began in 2024. "Cold turkey produces resentment and relapse," he said. "Gradual reset produces new defaults. By Day 4, most families report a noticeable shift at dinner — eyes up, conversations longer, less negotiation."
The book is published amid a broader cultural conversation about children's relationships with personal devices. In recent months, individual schools in Ireland, the United Kingdom and several European countries have introduced or expanded mobile phone restrictions, and governments in Australia, France and the Netherlands have moved toward age-based limits on social media access for minors.
Screens Down, Family Up: The 7-Day System to End Screen Battles is available as an instant-download PDF at screensdownfamilyup.com for €17 (approximately US$19) and in paperback on Amazon. The digital edition includes free lifetime updates to subsequent editions.
The release comes amid growing public concern over the impact of unmonitored device use on children's attention spans, sleep, and academic performance. In an Irish Times article published May 12, 2026, primary and secondary school teachers — speaking on condition of anonymity — described pupils arriving at school "exhausted" after late-night phone use, with one Limerick principal stating that parents are "reluctant to confront the issue" and another teacher saying that students who once "transformed before her eyes" had become "sullen, uninterested" after the introduction of a mobile phone.
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The teachers' accounts echo data published by major research bodies. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, teenagers spending four or more hours daily on screens report anxiety symptoms at 27.1 percent and depression symptoms at 25.9 percent — more than double the rates among teens with less daily screen time. Separately, Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago reported in 2025 that children in the United States average 21 hours of recreational screen time per week, against an average parental ideal of nine. The Pew Research Center reported in January 2025 that 86 percent of U.S. parents of teens identify managing screen time as their single greatest parenting concern.
Screens Down, Family Up offers parents a structured seven-day plan covering ages three through sixteen. The book includes word-for-word conversation scripts for moments parents typically find difficult — bedtime device handover, car-ride demands for phones, and the "all my friends have one" pressure — alongside more than fifty age-sorted screen-free activities and printable family agreements.
"Parents aren't failing," Martin said. "They're trying to raise children in a world designed to capture and hold attention. The book gives them a system, not advice — day-by-day, conversation-by-conversation, with the exact words to use when their child pushes back."
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Martin's framework is structured around progressive change rather than complete elimination of devices, an approach he attributes to feedback from families during a development period that began in 2024. "Cold turkey produces resentment and relapse," he said. "Gradual reset produces new defaults. By Day 4, most families report a noticeable shift at dinner — eyes up, conversations longer, less negotiation."
The book is published amid a broader cultural conversation about children's relationships with personal devices. In recent months, individual schools in Ireland, the United Kingdom and several European countries have introduced or expanded mobile phone restrictions, and governments in Australia, France and the Netherlands have moved toward age-based limits on social media access for minors.
Screens Down, Family Up: The 7-Day System to End Screen Battles is available as an instant-download PDF at screensdownfamilyup.com for €17 (approximately US$19) and in paperback on Amazon. The digital edition includes free lifetime updates to subsequent editions.
Source: /screensdownfamilyup.com
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