Karnataka Drafts Policy to Curb Unsafe Digital Tech Use in Students

The Karnataka government, with NIMHANS, has drafted a policy to address the unsafe and excessive use of digital technology among students. It responds to data showing one in four adolescents faces issues linked to problematic internet use, including anxiety and cyber risks. The policy framework focuses on prevention, early identification, and involves schools, teachers, and parents. Its core goals are to embed digital wellness into the school curriculum and establish clear screen-time norms.

Key Points: Karnataka, NIMHANS Draft Policy on Student Digital Safety

  • Tackles problematic internet use in youth
  • Aims to promote digital well-being in schools
  • Adopts preventive, multi-stakeholder strategy
  • Integrates cyber safety into education
2 min read

Govt of Karnataka, NIMHANS draft policy to tackle unsafe use of digital technology among students

Karnataka and NIMHANS draft a policy to tackle excessive screen time, cyber risks, and mental health issues among students through schools.

"nearly one in four adolescents showing signs of problematic internet use - Draft Policy"

New Delhi, April 1

Karnataka's Department of Health & Family Welfare, in collaboration with the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences and other stakeholder departments, has drafted a comprehensive policy to address the growing concern of excessive and unsafe digital technology use among students.

With nearly one in four adolescents showing signs of problematic internet use, the draft policy recognises the rising burden of mental health issues such as anxiety, sleep disturbances, poor academic performance, and social isolation linked to excessive screen time. It also highlights increasing exposure to cyber risks, including cyberbullying, grooming, and online exploitation.

The core aim of the draft policy is to promote digital well-being, emotional resilience, and responsible technology use among students through a structured, school-based framework.

The draft policy adopts a preventive, early identification and management strategy, integrating digital literacy, mental health promotion and cyber safety into the school ecosystem. It emphasises a multi-stakeholder model involving schools, teachers, parents, students, and government systems.

The State government has directed the schools to ensure a teacher training program for the healthy use of technology and proper communication between the school and the parents.

The draft policy will ensure that digital wellness is embedded in life skills and ICT education, covering social media literacy, cyber safety, mental health impacts, and ethical technology use.

Each school will define the screen-time norms (<=1 hour per day of recreational use), address cyber misconduct, and ensure counselling support. The teachers are to be trained to detect behavioural and academic red flags, with structured referral pathways to counsellors and mental health services. School-level bodies will oversee implementation, awareness, and incident management.

Regular sensitisation programs for students, teachers, and parents will be implemented.

The schools will encourage physical activity, hobbies, and "tech-free" periods to ensure balanced development.

Mechanisms to track digital distress, address cyber incidents, and provide access to support services such as Tele-MANAS (14416) are to be included.

A structured Training of Trainers (ToT) model will equip teachers with skills to understand technology addiction (including the 5C model: Craving, Control, Compulsion, Coping, Consequences), identify early warning signs, and implement classroom and peer-led interventions.

Parents are recognised as key stakeholders and are encouraged to enforce screen-time rules, create device-free zones, promote offline family engagement, and model responsible digital behaviour. Schools will support this through regular guidance and engagement sessions.

As per the draft policy, there are roles and responsibilities for students, teachers, parents, schools, and the government.

Students are expected to practice responsible digital behaviour and seek help when needed. The teachers will integrate digital wellness and monitor student well-being. The parents are to supervise and regulate technology use at home, the schools will implement policies and support systems, and the Government will provide guidelines, funding, and oversight.

The draft policy expects to improve digital literacy and responsible usage, reduce technology addiction and related mental health concerns.

It also aims to help detect mental health issues early, and timely intervention will bring stronger school-parent collaboration and ensure a safer and healthier digital environment in schools

This draft policy represents a proactive and scalable approach to managing digital risks among students. By combining education, mental health, and cyber safety within a unified framework, it aims to nurture a balanced, informed, and resilient generation capable of using technology responsibly.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally! The 5C model (Craving, Control, etc.) sounds very practical for teachers to understand. The structured referral to counsellors and Tele-MANAS is excellent. Implementation is key now - will schools actually get the funding and support?
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Aman W
Good initiative, but limiting recreational screen time to 1 hour per day seems unrealistic in today's world. What about online homework and research? The policy should be more flexible and focus on quality of usage, not just quantity.
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Sarah B
The multi-stakeholder approach is smart. Cyberbullying and online exploitation are real dangers. Creating 'tech-free' periods and promoting physical activity can bring back the childhood many of us had. Hope they also address the pressure of online coaching classes.
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Vikram M
NIMHANS involvement gives it credibility. Mental health issues in students are rising alarmingly. Integrating this into life skills education is a brilliant move. But what about older students in PU and degree colleges? They need this policy too.
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Kavya N
Parents modelling responsible behaviour is the most important point! We tell kids to put phones down, but we are always scrolling. This policy will only work if we, as adults, also participate. Let's create more device-free family time. 👍

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