In a typical high school health classroom in Springfield, Massachusetts, teacher Pete Hall stands before a group of teenagers, probing the cultural lexicon of their generation. When he asks his students what comes to mind when they hear the phrase “sports betting,” the responses—projected instantly onto their laptop screens—paint a portrait of a landscape saturated with risk: Fantasy football. Money. Adrenaline. Power. Control.
For Hall, these words aren’t just abstract concepts. At 40, he is a man who knows the visceral, gut-wrenching cycle of addiction from the inside out. As he shares his personal journey—from modest five-dollar wagers to thousands of dollars lost in a desperate attempt to break even—the room falls silent. He isn’t there to lecture; he is there to break the illusion.
As sports betting becomes increasingly normalized across the United States, educators and public health officials are sounding the alarm: what was once a fringe activity is rapidly evolving into a pervasive public health crisis for American youth.
The Normalization of the Wager
Since a landmark 2018 Supreme Court ruling overturned federal restrictions on sports betting, the floodgates have opened. Today, 39 states and the District of Columbia permit some form of sports wagering. This rapid expansion has brought with it an unprecedented level of accessibility. With the rise of mobile apps and sophisticated online platforms, a betting parlor is now effectively inside every teenager’s pocket.
The impact of this accessibility is stark. A recent study by Common Sense Media revealed that approximately one-third of boys aged 11 to 17 have participated in some form of gambling over the past year. Even more concerning, the exposure is often involuntary. According to the same report, nearly six in ten adolescent boys encounter gambling advertisements on social media and YouTube—platforms they use for daily entertainment.
"It’s not content they are searching for, necessarily," says Michael Robb, head of research at Common Sense Media. "You look at the advertising and it’s part of the air they breathe."
A Chronology of a Growing Crisis
The trajectory of youth gambling has shifted dramatically over the last several years, tracking alongside the legal expansion of the industry:
- 2018: The U.S. Supreme Court strikes down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, granting individual states the authority to legalize sports betting.
- 2020–2022: As mobile betting apps proliferate, states like Virginia begin to recognize the need for educational intervention, passing legislation to integrate gambling awareness into school curriculums.
- 2023: Massachusetts officially legalizes sports betting, triggering a surge in marketing campaigns that target younger demographics.
- 2024: The Massachusetts Office of the Attorney General forms the Youth Sports Betting Safety Coalition, partnering with professional sports franchises like the Red Sox and Celtics to combat the harms of gambling.
- 2025: Massachusetts rolls out a pilot curriculum in high schools and community organizations, designed to equip students with the tools to identify the psychological "tricks" used by betting companies.
The Anatomy of Vulnerability
The vulnerability of the adolescent brain to gambling is not merely a matter of poor decision-making; it is a biological and social reality. Experts point to three primary drivers:
- Peer Influence: Over 80% of adolescent boys who gamble report that their friends do so as well. Gambling has become a social currency, a way to build status or engage in "friendly" rivalries.
- The Illusion of Skill: Young people often conflate knowledge of sports with an ability to predict outcomes. This "expert bias" convinces them they can beat the house, despite the sophisticated algorithms designed to ensure the opposite.
- Gamification: The lines between video gaming and gambling have blurred. Modern games frequently feature "loot boxes" and virtual items that require real money, conditioning young users to the dopamine-fueled cycle of chance-based rewards.
Marlene Warner, executive director of the Massachusetts Council on Gaming and Health, notes that the sophistication of modern advertising is unprecedented. "Kids from the ages of 11 or 12 are not only seeing the ads, they’re absolutely being directly targeted," she explains. When teenagers have access to debit cards and parents’ financial accounts via smartphones, the barrier to entry is effectively non-existent.
Official Responses and Educational Initiatives
Recognizing the urgency of the situation, public and private sectors are attempting to pivot from reactive measures to proactive education. The Massachusetts pilot program, developed by the Council on Gaming and Health, consists of four 45-minute sessions. Unlike traditional "don’t do it" campaigns, this curriculum focuses on media literacy.
"It’s a very hands-on approach," says Shekinah Hoffman, the council’s director of programs. The lessons teach students to deconstruct commercials featuring celebrities like Kevin Hart or Kendall Jenner. Students learn to spot "urgency tactics"—phrases like "limited time offer" or "don’t miss out"—and to critically analyze the "fine print" that is often rendered in nearly invisible font.

The results of this curriculum have been promising. In initial trials, 70% of students could identify the warning signs of problem gambling, and 64% expressed an intent to wait until the legal age of 21 to gamble.
However, Massachusetts is not acting in isolation. Virginia has mandated gambling prevention education, while North Carolina has funneled grants into community-based programs. These efforts represent a shift toward treating gambling as a core component of modern financial and digital literacy, much like sex education or driver’s safety.
The Human Cost: Stories from the Frontline
For students like 18-year-old Jandiel Ortiz, the lessons hit home. Having engaged with platforms like Polymarket after watching "basketball scientists" on YouTube, Ortiz initially saw betting as a way to supplement his income. "If I’m low on money, I try to make a small bet," he admits.
However, after participating in the school sessions, his perspective shifted. He began to see the "house edge" for what it was—a system designed to profit from his losses. He is now considering deleting his betting apps altogether.
Others, like senior Davonna Davis, observe the toll it takes on her peer group. She watches as classmates fall into "the hole," losing money they cannot afford to lose, fueled by a misguided belief in their own luck. "I try to persuade them not to even get into it," she says, "because I know how deep it can get."
Implications for the Future
The long-term implications of this trend are significant. Research, including work by Jeff Derevensky at McGill University, suggests that early exposure to gambling—whether through sports betting or virtual gaming—is a strong predictor of future addiction.
"We educate kids about drugs, unprotected sex, drinking and driving, but very few do it around problem gambling," Derevensky notes. He argues that gambling has achieved a level of social acceptance that masks its inherent dangers. The challenge for educators is to counter a multi-billion dollar industry that has successfully branded itself as a lifestyle accessory.
Moving forward, the goal for advocates like Marlene Warner is to move beyond pilot programs and toward state-mandated curriculum requirements. This would ensure that every student, regardless of their socioeconomic background, receives training on the risks of wagering before they reach adulthood.
Conclusion
The battle against youth gambling is not a battle against technology, but a battle for the cognitive autonomy of the next generation. As Pete Hall reminds his students, the goal of his class isn’t to scare them; it is to inform them. By pulling back the curtain on the industry’s tactics—the flashy celebrity endorsements, the manipulated sense of urgency, and the hidden math of the house—schools are attempting to give students the agency to walk away from the bet.
In an age where the next wager is only a swipe away, the most valuable asset a teenager can possess is the ability to recognize when the game is rigged. As the data shows, when students are armed with knowledge rather than judgment, they are more than capable of recognizing that the real win is keeping their money—and their future—in their own hands.












