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Revyv integrates digital wellness into the curriculum and support structure — so healthy digital behaviour is built consistently, not addressed only when it becomes a problem.
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A student sitting in class is also, in most cases, within reach of a device that delivers notifications, peer group activity, and social comparison in real time. The pressure of that environment does not pause during a lesson. The anxiety it generates — about what was posted, who responded, what was seen — runs beneath the surface of a school day that is otherwise focused on academic content.
This is not a disciplinary problem that can be resolved by a phone-in-bag policy. It is a readiness problem. Students who have not developed the capacity to manage their digital environment bring fragmented attention, social anxiety, and comparison-driven stress into every learning context. A school that addresses academic preparation without addressing the digital habits that undermine it is working against itself.
The ability to manage screen time, recognise when social media is affecting mood or focus, set practical limits on device use, and behave responsibly in online environments is not something students arrive at naturally. It is a set of skills — and like all skills, it develops through structured exposure, practice, and reinforcement over time.
Schools that teach digital self-management explicitly — as part of the curriculum rather than as a one-off assembly or an occasional reminder — give students a practical advantage that extends well beyond school. The student who can manage their own attention and recognise the influence of digital environments is better equipped for further education, for work, and for a social life that will be mediated by screens for the rest of their life.
The capacities that social-emotional learning develops — self-awareness, emotional regulation, the ability to manage attention under pressure — are the same capacities that determine how well a student navigates digital environments. A student with strong emotional regulation is less vulnerable to social media comparison. A student with developed self-awareness notices when a screen habit is affecting their mood or sleep. These are not separate topics requiring separate programmes.
Revyv integrates digital wellness content with SEL curriculum so that the two reinforce each other. Check-in data, engagement patterns, and observed behaviour feed into a coordinated view that helps counselors and teachers identify students whose digital habits are affecting their readiness — and act before the impact becomes academic or social crisis.
Revyv integrates digital wellness into the curriculum and support structure — so healthy digital behaviour is built consistently, not addressed only when it becomes a problem.
Request a Demo