Table of Contents

ADHD for kids and teens

Why Screens Are So Hard to Put Down for Kids and Teens

(And Why ADHD Makes It Even Tougher)

At Rocky Mountain Psychological Services, many families come to us feeling stuck in daily battles over screens. Parents describe emotional meltdowns when devices are turned off, escalating conflict around limits, difficulty with sleep, and increasing concerns about attention, mood, and school performance. These struggles often leave caregivers feeling frustrated, worried, and unsure of what to do next, especially when they are already setting rules and following through consistently.

From a clinical perspective, these challenges are not a sign of poor parenting or a lack of boundaries. Instead, they reflect how modern digital technology interacts with the developing brain. When parents understand what is happening neurologically and developmentally, it becomes easier to move away from blame and toward strategies that are more effective, calmer, and easier to maintain over time.

Why Screens Are So Powerful for the Brain

Digital platforms are not neutral tools. They are intentionally designed using principles from behavioural psychology and neuroscience to capture and sustain attention. Central to this process is dopamine, a neurotransmitter involved in motivation and learning.

While dopamine is often referred to as the brain’s “pleasure chemical,” research shows that it is more accurately associated with drive or “wanting” rather than enjoyment itself. Dopamine is released most strongly when rewards are immediate, novel, or unpredictable conditions that are built into social media feeds, video platforms, and many games.

This helps explain a common experience parents report: children and teens continue scrolling, gaming, or watching even when they say they are bored or no longer enjoying it. The brain has learned that screens provide a fast, low-effort route to stimulation or emotional relief, making disengagement difficult once use has started (Berridge & Robinson, 2016; Schultz, 2016).

Compared to activities like homework, chores, or preparing for bed, which require sustained effort and delayed reward, screens are neurologically efficient. For a developing brain, that efficiency matters.

Why Kids and Teens Are Especially Vulnerable

Children and adolescents are not simply “small adults.” Their brains are still developing, particularly the areas responsible for impulse control, emotional regulation, and long-term planning. Research on brain development shows that these systems continue to mature well into early adulthood.

At the same time, reward-sensitive brain systems develop earlier. This creates a mismatch: strong sensitivity to novelty and reward paired with still-developing self-regulation. Digital environments, which provide constant stimulation and immediate feedback, fit perfectly into this gap.

Research on adolescent brain development highlights that this heightened reward sensitivity makes young people particularly responsive to highly stimulating environments, including digital media (Casey et al., 2018). In our clinical work, we often see that screens are doing more than just entertaining children and teens. They may also be helping them manage boredom, reduce stress, avoid uncomfortable emotions, feel socially connected, or experience a sense of competence and mastery.

When screen use is reduced without considering what need it is meeting, emotional reactions and resistance often increase. Understanding the function of screen use is therefore critical.

Why Turning Screens Off Can Lead to Big Emotional Reactions

Many parents are surprised by how intense their child’s reaction can be when screen time ends. Irritability, bargaining (“just five more minutes”), emotional shutdowns, or sudden conflict are common experiences.

Learning theory helps explain this pattern. When a behaviour is strongly reinforced—especially on a variable schedule, where rewards are unpredictable—its removal can trigger stress and dysregulation. In other words, the nervous system reacts when a familiar source of reward or relief is abruptly taken away (Domjan, 2018).

From a clinical standpoint, these reactions are better understood as difficulties with regulation and transitions rather than intentional defiance. This distinction matters. When parents interpret these moments as “bad behaviour,” responses often escalate. When they are understood as moments of dysregulation, the focus can shift to support, predictability, and skill-building.

Why ADHD Makes Screen Use Even More Challenging

For children and teens with ADHD, screen-related struggles are often more intense and more persistent. ADHD involves differences in attention regulation, impulse control, and reward processing. Research consistently shows that individuals with ADHD are more sensitive to immediate rewards and have greater difficulty delaying gratification (Luman et al., 2010).

Screens amplify these vulnerabilities by offering:

  • Constant novelty
  • Immediate feedback
  • High levels of stimulation
  • Minimal effort to access reward

As a result, screens can become one of the most effective tools a child or teen with ADHD has for regulating attention and emotions. This does not mean they are choosing screens over family, school, or responsibilities. It means their brain is responding to the fastest available source of stimulation and relief.

In practice, this is why strict limits or consequences alone often do not lead to lasting change. Children and teens with ADHD typically need more structure, clearer expectations, and greater support around transitions, not simply tighter control.

What We Focus On Clinically at RMPS

When families come to RMPS for support around screen-related concerns, our work tends to focus on several key areas that are strongly supported by both research and clinical experience.

1. Shaping the Environment

Behaviour change is far more sustainable when the environment supports it. Small structural changes, such as where devices are used, where they are stored or charged, and when they are available, often reduce conflict more effectively than repeated reminders or consequences.

2. Creating Predictability

Clear, consistent expectations help reduce emotional escalation and negotiation fatigue. When children know what to expect and what comes next, their nervous systems are better able to regulate. Predictability benefits both children and parents.

3. Supporting Transitions

Transitions away from screens are a common trigger for dysregulation. Advance warnings, visual timers, and consistent shutdown routines help prepare the brain for change and reduce stress during these moments.

4. Replacing the Function of Screens

Lasting change rarely happens by simply removing screens. Effective support focuses on identifying what the screen is providing, stimulation, relief, connection, or a sense of competence, and finding other ways to meet that same need.

Supporting Teens Without Escalating Conflict

Adolescents often understand that screens affect their sleep, mood, or stress, but feel caught between social expectations, academic pressure, and emotional regulation needs. In our work, we consistently find that collaborative approaches are more effective than control-based strategies.

Involving teens in setting goals, testing changes, and reviewing what helps (and what does not) supports autonomy while maintaining necessary structure. This approach reduces resistance and increases the likelihood of meaningful, lasting change.

Our Approach at Rocky Mountain Psychological Services

At Rocky Mountain Psychological Services, we take a bio-psycho-social approach to concerns related to screen use. We look at brain development, emotional coping skills, attention and learning factors, family routines, and current stressors together rather than in isolation.

Support may involve working directly with parents to reduce power struggles, helping children and teens build regulation skills, clarifying contributing factors when needed, and providing education about how sleep, motivation, and behaviour interact. Our goal is not to eliminate screens, but to help families reduce conflict and develop healthier, more balanced relationships with technology.

Next steps: A parent-focused consultation can help clarify what is driving screen struggles in your home and identify practical, evidence-informed strategies tailored to your family.

References 

  • Berridge, K. C., & Robinson, T. E. (2016). Liking, wanting, and the incentive-sensitization theory of addiction. American Psychologist, 71(8), 670–679.
  • Casey, B. J., Heller, A. S., Gee, D. G., & Cohen, A. O. (2018). Development of the emotional brain. Neuroscience Letters, 693, 29–34.
  • Domjan, M. (2018). The principles of learning and behavior (7th ed.). Cengage Learning.
  • Luman, M., Tripp, G., & Scheres, A. (2010). Identifying the neurobiology of altered reinforcement sensitivity in ADHD. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 34(5), 744–754.

MacKenzie Ebel

MacKenzie is a Psychometrist/Psychological Assistant at RMPS. She completed her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology at Princeton University, where she also played 4 years for the women’s ice hockey team. She recently completed her Masters in Counselling Psychology through City University of Seattle. MacKenzie has worked with children, youth, and their families in a number of settings, through coaching, as a behavioural aid, and counselling through her internship placement. She is excited to continue learning about assessment administration, neurofeedback, and play therapy practices at RMPS! Currently, she is part of the assessment and neurotherapy team, as she completes her final capstone assignment and intends to join our counselling team as a Registered Provisional Psychologist.

Tammy Thomson

Tammy is a graduate of the Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology (MACP) program at Yorkville University and is trained at the master’s level in art therapy as a professional art psychotherapist and member of the Canadian Art Therapy Association. She brings more than 20 years of experience working with children, teens, and families in child development settings, children’s hospitals, and schools as an early childhood educator and elementary teacher. She completed a Bachelor of Applied Science specializing in Child Development Studies at the University of Guelph, Ontario and holds a Graduate Diploma of Teaching and Learning from the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. Tammy is a member of the Canadian Counsellor and Psychotherapy Association and College of Alberta Psychologists while pursuing her next goal of registration as a provisional psychologist. Tammy values a client-centered approach using play therapy and the expressive arts to support those who may find it difficult to articulate their thoughts and feelings with words. Children and families do not need any skill or prior art experience and the art studio is a safe place where children can gain a sense of independence, greater emotional regulation, and confidence through self-exploration. Expressive interventions in art therapy can treat behavioural issues, anxiety, depression, ADHD, autism, learning disabilities, physical and developmental disabilities, and attachment difficulties. As a parent of three young children herself, Tammy understands the complexities of family life using compassion to help parents feel more confident in their role of raising a successful family.

Raquel Freitas

Raquel is an Office Administrator at RMPS. Back in Brazil, her home country, she graduated as a Psychologist and worked as a clinician for the past 5 years. Although she loved working with children and adults, she discovered a new passion: manage the administrative tasks that keep the business running. 

As someone who is passionate about learning new things and developing new skills, with the career transition also came the decision to live abroad and explore a new culture. To serve empathetically and connect with people is Raquel’s main personal and professional goal.

Emma Donnelly

Emma is a Registered Psychologist with the College of Alberta Psychologists. She completed her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology in her hometown at Brandon University, after which she moved to Calgary to earn her Master’s of Science in School and Applied Child Psychology at the University of Calgary. Emma has a passion for working with children and families and has experience doing so in a number of settings, including schools, homes, early intervention programs, and within the community. She specializes in assessment, including psychoeduational, social-emotional-behavioural, and autism assessment. Emma uses a client centred approach to counselling, supported by cognitive behavioural therapy, as well as play-based and attachment-based techniques. She believes in meeting clients where they are at and prides herself in working together with her clients to achieve their goals, improve their functioning, and enjoy their daily life.

Amanda Stoner

Amanda is a Registered Psychologist with the College of Alberta Psychologists. Amanda earned her doctoral degree in Psychology at Brock University in Ontario in 2017, with a specialization in developmental psychology. Amanda provides formal assessment services at RMPS. 

Since 2009, Amanda has received formal training and work experience in private practice settings in conducting psycho-educational assessments for students ranging from preschool through university. Amanda is skilled at test administration, interpretation of data, and report writing for various referral questions including ADHD, Learning Disorders, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Anxiety, Giftedness, and Intellectual Disabilities. Amanda enjoys working with people of all ages from diverse backgrounds, and she tries to make the testing environment feel relaxed and comfortable while maintaining integrity in testing protocol.

Denise Riewe

Denise has completed a Bachelor of Health Sciences through the University of Lethbridge and a Master of Counselling with Athabasca University. She is a Registered Provisional Psychologist with the College of Alberta Psychologists and a member of the Psychological Association of Alberta. Denise has over 9 years of experience supporting children, youth and their families in both residential and community-based practices. Denise is experienced in working with high and at-risk youth, supporting children and their families with strength-based approaches. She practices from a client-center approach supported by Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Dialectical Behaviour Therapy, Theraplay, and other play and art-based modalities.

John Pynn

John is a Registered Provisional Psychologist with the College of Alberta Psychologists. He completed his Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology at Yorkville University. He brings more than 20 years of experience working with children, teens, and families in a variety of settings. He brings a relaxed and collaborative atmosphere to sessions. John uses an integrated counselling approach including client-centred, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), and Solution-Focussed therapy (SFT) to find the best-fit for clients. He has experience with a variety of mental health concerns including anxiety, depression, anger, self-
esteem, relationships, parenting, ADHD, grief/loss, addictions, and trauma. This broad experience comes from working in schools, social service agencies, group-care, and clinical settings. He also draws from the practical experience of being a parent to two teenagers as well as a husband. Supporting and empowering clients with mental health concerns is something John genuinely enjoys. John also provides counselling for adults and holds a Gottman level 1 certification for couples therapy.

Zara Crasto

Zara is a Psychometrist/Psychological Assistant at RMPS. She completed her Bachelor of Science in Psychology at the University of Calgary and her Graduate Diploma in Psychological Assessment at Concordia University of Edmonton. 

Zara has spent over five years working alongside children, adolescents, and their families in a variety of settings. These include public and private schools, in-home support, residential programs, early-intervention programs, and non-profit organizations. Currently, Zara is part of the assessment and neurotherapy team. As a lifelong learner, Zara plans to go back to graduate school and eventually become a psychologist one day.

Kellie Lanktree

Kellie is a Registered Psychologist with the College of Alberta Psychologists. She completed a Bachelor of Child and Youth Care with the University of Victoria and a Master of Education in Counselling Psychology through the University of Lethbridge. Kellie has over 10 years experience supporting children and youth with developmental disorders/delays and their families. Kellie has experience working in schools, clinical settings, and within homes to provide support and therapeutic interventions. Through her time at RMPS, Kellie has also gained experience in helping individuals affected by trauma, grief/loss, separations, emotional dysregulation, depression, and anxiety. Kellie practices through developmental, attachment-based and trauma-informed lenses, and draws from a variety of play-based approaches such as Synergetic Play Therapy, Child-centered play therapy, DIR/Floortime, art-based mediums, and mindfulness-based practices. Kellie also provides Neurofeedback therapy, and is working on receiving her certification through BCIA. Kellie believes in meeting children and their families where they are at and that there is no “one size fits all” for therapy.