PODCAST INVITADO: Serie EdTechnical 3, Episodio 3

Esta temporada, la financiadora de EdTech, Libby Hills, y el investigador de IA, Owen Henkel, continúan hablando con destacados investigadores, profesionales y educadores sobre el tema. Serie de podcasts de EdTechnical Se abordará la vanguardia de la IA en la educación. Se desglosarán conceptos complejos de IA en explicaciones no técnicas para comprender mejor las investigaciones y ayudar a los educadores a discernir la información útil entre la exageración generada por la IA.

In this episode of EdTechnical, Libby and Owen speak with Candice Odgers, a psychologist and researcher studying how online experiences influence children’s mental health. They revisit the debate around social media and teen wellbeing, questioning the claims that social media use has caused rising rates of depression and anxiety. Candice calls for a more careful reading of the evidence and cautions against rushing into restrictive policies that may have unintended consequences or divert attention from more effective interventions.

More on teens and tech
¿Debería prohibirse a los jóvenes el uso de teléfonos inteligentes?

Candice also shares early findings from her recent research into AI in education. She finds surprisingly limited use of AI among young people, and mixed perceptions around what counts as cheating, which shapes how these tools are received. Notably, she found no clear socioeconomic divide in AI engagement, raising questions about how these tools might be designed to support more equitable learning. They discuss the challenge of designing rigorous studies in this space and the need for thoughtful, evidence-informed approaches to both social media and AI.

Enlaces

Adaptlab – Adaptation, Development and Positive Transitions Lab
NYT Article: Panicking About Your Kids’ Phones? New Research Says Don’t

Semblanza

Candice Odgers is the Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Development and Professor of Psychological Science at the University of California Irvine. She also co-directs the Child & Brain Development Program at the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and the CERES Network funded by the Jacobs Foundation.

Her team has been capturing the daily lives and health of adolescents using mobile phones and sensors over the past decade. More recently, she has been working to leverage digital technologies to better support the needs of children and adolescents as they come of age in an increasingly unequal and digital world.