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FYI: Schools Are Banning Student Cellphones – Here’s Why

Cell phones confiscated from students are stored in a specialized phone-safe at Timber Creek High School in Orlando, Fla., on Friday, Oct. 6, 2023. (Zack Wittman/The New York Times)

(Yahoo) Cellphones have become a school scourge. More than 70% of high school teachers say student phone distraction is a “major problem,” according to a survey this year by Pew Research.

That’s why states are mounting a bipartisan effort to crack down on rampant student cellphone use. So far this year, at least eight states have passed laws, issued orders or adopted rules to curb phone use among students during school hours.

The issue isn’t simply that some children and teenagers compulsively use apps such as Snap, TikTok and Instagram during lessons, distracting themselves and their classmates. In many schools, students have also used their phones to bully, sexually exploit and share videos of physical attacks on their peers.

But cellphone restrictions can be difficult for teachers to enforce without schoolwide rules requiring students to place their phones in lockers or other locations.

Now, state lawmakers, along with some prominent governors, are pushing for more uniform restrictions in public schools.

With the new school year already underway this month in some states, those new rules are kicking in. Here’s what to know.

Why are schools cracking down on smartphones?

Students are often subject to cyberbullying and bombarded with text messages and social media notifications during school. Studies have shown that mobile phones, text messages and even “nomophobia” — the fear of not having access to one’s phone — can distract students and impair learning. States hope that cracking down on phone use in the classroom will reduce learning distractions as well as tech misuse by students.

Some independent schools are also banning phones. Recently, the head of Georgetown Day School in Washington, D.C., wrote in The Atlantic that it was “time to remove phones from schools.”

Do school phone bans work?

Teachers say that phone bans in the classroom have helped improve students’ ability to concentrate on their lessons and work in groups. Some schools have also found the bans decreased phone-related bullying and student fights.

Even so, the bans could have limited effect on the larger problem of technology in the classroom.

Some students use school-issued laptops or tablets in their classes for much of the school day, with diversions such as YouTube or video games one click away. Studies have found that laptop use in the classroom can have a distracting, negative impact on student learning.

Students have also used school devices to bully their peers. Bark, a risk-monitoring service that scans students’ school-administered Google and Microsoft accounts, said in July that it had documented more than 8.5 million cases of school cyberbullying on Google Docs since 2019 — and more than a half-million cyberbullying cases involving students on Microsoft Teams.

Microsoft said Teams offered a wide range of controls that schools could use to supervise or block student chats.

Google said that its education products had tools for students to report bullying to their schools and that settings in its education software and school-issued Chromebook laptops enabled schools to block certain websites and apps.

Where did the phone bans start?

Last year, Florida passed a law requiring public schools to prohibit students from using personal wireless devices, including smartphones and earbuds, during class time. Orange County Public Schools in Orlando, the nation’s eighth-largest school system, went even further, banning students from using their phones during the entire school day.

The Florida measure also requires school districts to block student access to social media platforms on school Wi-Fi and specifically prohibits TikTok on school-issued devices. It includes exceptions permitting cellphone use for educational activities “when expressly directed” by a teacher.

Which states are next?

Several states have followed Florida, passing laws or adopting new rules this year that, with limited exceptions, ban student cellphone use either during class or throughout the entire school day. These include Indiana, Louisiana and South Carolina where the new school year is already underway.

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