New York City schools have had a long history of phone restriction policies, with an outright ban in the early 2000s that was reversed about 10 years later. Individual schools, like the ones where Corletta and Leston teach, have had the freedom to implement their own restrictions.
That will change again in the new academic year as all schools in New York state will implement a bell-to-bell ban — one of the strictest among dozens of other states that have passed similar legislation — barring students from access to personal devices that can connect to the internet for the entire school day. Schools will be required to provide storage for the devices.
But with such new policies, many being implemented for the first time this school year or in effect for less than two years, no one knows what the perfect model looks like.
Researchers are moving cautiously as they grapple with uncertainty about the effectiveness of in-school phone bans on mental health. Data yields mixed results — and there’s growing a sentiment that more has to be done outside of schools to get kids off their phones and back into the world.
A recent Pew Research survey found that nearly three quarters of Americans support restrictive phone use in schools, up six percentage points since last year — but many are also unsure how far the bans should go. About 44% of respondents supported all day bans, with others split on whether students should have access to their phones between classes or at lunch.
Kids get bullied in school. Kids feel alone. LGBTQ+ kids, neurodivergent kids, others. Phones connect them to support. Friends, like minded folks, etc. Some get support at home. Some don't.
Bans will harm a lot of kids. It's a sad and dangerous moral panic.
Parental involvement would be wonderful, but we should not punish all kids just because some parents aren't up to the task.
I'm showing my age here - I was alone in school. I am neurodivergent and part of the LGBTQ+ community, both things that were not well understood or accepted when I was in school. The only brief pieces of support and connection I had was online needed to be on a PC as smartphones were simply not a thing.
Are you saying that children today must have instant and immediate access to friends and like minded people online during school hours? The children I know (i.e. children within my family and the children of friends) don't have smartphones at school and are able to wait until break times or after school to socialise but they're also not American; is this a uniquely American issue?
Why are you so obsessed with taking away that access? That's not a good thing you know
The thread lays out my opinion retty clearly; characterising a discussion as an obsession is being deliberately disingenuous.