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Are students losing touch with cultural roots in the digital age?

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jan 22, 2026, 22:49 IST
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1/8

How the digital world is impacting kids education

Phones, tablets, and smart boards sit beside school bags today. Students learn fast and connect wide. But a silent worry remains at home and in classrooms. Are cultural roots getting weaker in this digital rush, or are they changing shape? The answer is not a straight yes or no. It needs a closer look at real life, not fear.

2/8

Screens changed habits, not values

Daily habits look very different now. Evening play moved from courtyards to online games. Family stories now compete with short videos. Yet values do not disappear so easily. Many students still follow festivals, food customs, and family rituals. They just share them online. During the festive season, school students posting regional festival reels in local languages. The habit changed, but the core stayed.

3/8

Language loss feels real, but not total

Many parents notice children mixing English words at home. This feels like a loss. But the picture is mixed. Schools also added local language clubs after school hours. Under the NEP 2020, students are also encouraged to learn at least 3 languages in school. The comfort with mother tongue may look weaker, but interest still exists when space is given.

4/8

Culture now lives on new platforms

Earlier, dance and music stayed on stage. Now they travel through phones. Throughout the year, school students from small towns have went viral for folk dance videos or performing for school events on social media. These clips reached millions. The steps were old, but the stage was new. Culture did not fade. It found a louder voice and medium.

5/8

Global content creates curiosity, not erasure

Students today watch Korean shows, Japanese anime, and global sports. This raises concern at home. But exposure does not always mean replacement. Many students compare cultures and ask questions. School projects now include global and local culture side by side. This builds pride, not distance, when guided well.

6/8

Schools play a silent but strong role

Schools that link lessons to local history see better connection. The example comes from schools using neighbourhood walks or visits to historical places around the city or town to teach history and art. When schools lead, students follow with interest.

7/8

Families still shape cultural memory

No app replaces lived moments. Cooking together, festival preparation, and bedtime stories still leave the deepest mark. Even today, students remember rituals they practice, not just watch. Digital life may be fast, but family spaces slow it down. This balance matters more than screen time alone.

Students are not losing touch with culture. They are touching it differently. The danger lies not in technology, but in absence of guidance. When homes and schools stay involved, culture survives and even grows stronger in modern forms.


8/8

Disclaimer

This article is based on observed social trends, media reports, and education practices. It does not claim to represent every child or school experience.

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