Teaching KIDS SUSTAINABILITY & Global Responsibility Through TECHNOLOGY
Year 2025 | Vol XVI | Issue No. 1 (August – November 2025) Author: Sonal Jha Abstract Technology is no longer a tool; it has become a teacher. Nowadays, before holding even a pencil, kids are holding phones. This article explores how digital resources such as games, apps, and storytelling platforms can be leveraged to teach complex concepts like sustainability and global responsibility. By integrating interactive digital tools, educational apps, and age-appropriate multimedia content into early childhood classrooms, educators can foster environmental awareness and social empathy in engaging, relatable ways. The article highlights strategies and examples that demonstrate how technological resources can nurture eco-conscious habits, promote global citizenship, and inspire children to become thoughtful stewards of the planet from an early age. It also includes case studies, surveys, and research-based insights to show how the right tech and intent can make value-based education engaging, relevant, and future-ready. Introduction In today’s interconnected world, it is vital to instill the principles of sustainability and global responsibility in children from an early age. With technology becoming an integral part of their lives, it offers a powerful medium to engage young minds in understanding and caring for the world around them. Through thoughtfully designed digital tools and interactive experiences, educators can introduce concepts like environmental care, cultural diversity, and responsible consumption in ways that are both meaningful and age-appropriate. This article delves into how technology can be a bridge to building a more conscious and compassionate next generation. Teaching Kids Sustainability & Global Responsibility Through Technology From mobile phones to screens, gadgets are omnipresent today. It is fair to say that children are growing up with gadgets. Thus, it is essential to make them understand the concept of sustainability and global responsibility. As per a report published by Happinetz, 42% of children under 12 years spend two to four hours daily on a screen. 47% of children, those above 12 years, are glued to the screen. But the question here is: How can technology be a helping hand in this matter? Will it help or add more screen time? Let’s explore how kids can be taught about essential issues using digital tools. The Urgency of Early Education in Sustain- ability Climate change is no longer a future threat; it’s already here. Global temperatures are at an all-time high, the weather is increasingly unpredictable, and natural disasters, such as droughts and floods, are in the news almost daily. As per the report of the Inter-governmentalPanel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2023, if global warming increases above 1.5%, the Earth will face irreversible damage in the coming decades. And who will it affect the most? The upcoming generation, the kids of today.So, it’s important to make them understand all these serious issues. But the problem is that we don’t teach them from childhood. Yes, environmental studies as a subject is there, but it’s limited to definitions and facts. Slogans like “say no to plastic” and “save water ” are raised, but awareness may still be lacking due to limited explanation of “how” and “why?” That’s why it is essential to have sustainability in education and global citizenship. These are not just textbook skills but shape the lifetime behaviour of kids as citizens. When values like empathy, responsibility, civic sense, and long- term thinking are embedded from a young age, it not only helps children be aware but also action-oriented.Developing a world view, this is not limited only to the environment. Global responsibility means seeing the world as an interconnected system. When a kid knows that their plastic bottle can pollute some other country’s river, or a tree planted by them gives oxygen, their thinking becomes global from local.This mindset shift is important. But how to teach this to children? Kids these days get easily bored with traditional classroom methods. So, the best way of teaching them is to utilize digital tools and screens smartly. Digital Behaviour in Early Childhood Today’s kids recognize YouTube’s logo before they say the word “Mumma”, and it’s not an exaggeration. According to a study by the National Institute of Health (NIH), the screen time of children by the age of 3 years is more than 2.5 hours daily. And these numbers have almost doubled post-pandemic. The trend is similar in India, too. However, screen time is not just a number. It reflects the learning style of kids, their attention span, and content exposure. What Kids Watch?As per Kantar KidScan India Report 2024 – 61% of kids watch cartoons, nursery rhymes, and unboxing videos on YouTube and YouTube Kids. 34% watch mobile games like Minecraft and Roblox. Only 5% to 7% of kids use learning apps actively. What’s the Problem with this?Children watching screens is not the problem, but what they are learning from the screen is. Passive watching hurts their cognitive and emotional development, especially when the content is shallow. When they watch unboxing videos, a dopamine loop is triggered that suppresses real-world curiosity. The FlipsideWhen screen time is combined with the right content, it can be a superpower for children. A study by the American Academy of Pediatrics (2022) reveals that gamified content and interactive storytelling help children retain things they learn and develop values like empathy, cooperation, and problem-solving. So, the real challenge is not controlling screen time but optimizing screen quality. Kids’ behaviour shows that they think of the screen as a learning medium. Now, it is our responsibility to ensure they don’t see the screen only as a medium of entertainment but as a tool for sustainable and valued education. Role of Technology in Education Today Nowadays, a classroom feels incomplete without a smartboard. Textbooks are now Portable Document Formats (PDFs), homework is assigned on Google Classroom, and parent-teacher meetings are conducted on Zoom. In short, education is tech-enabled. However, the question arises: Is technology only for formality or for genuinely enhancing learning?EdTech boomed in India during the lockdown. As per Statista, the EdTech market was more than ₹34,000 crore from 2020 to 2023. But the problem









