This report from The Guardian reports on a study undertaken by University College London. The report suggests that outright smartphone bans may have unintended negative consequences for young people.
The study questioned 732 secondary school students aged 11 to 18, as well as 27 teachers and 41 parents about their views on phone bans, using questionnaires, interviews and focus groups.
There was widespread agreement about the potentially disruptive influence of smartphones in the classroom, but the research uncovered a sharp generational divide. While 87% of teachers and 88% of parents were in favour of a blanket ban, 75% of pupils disagreed with the policy.
Students argued that banning smartphones restricted access to “essential” tools they relied on to navigate daily life and support their learning, such as bus timetables, weather forecasts and homework apps. They also valued the fact that smartphones offered direct access to helpful support networks, and girls in particular said their smartphones helped them feel safer when travelling alone.
Such arguments are to be expected from the young people that are the target of the school day ban. In fact the various ways schools are implementing the ban do allow students access at the end of the school day and most use one of the following strategies to manage the ban.
Only time will tell how well these new rules work and how it impacts on young people, their school work and their safety. Pushing all traffic until after the school day is over does not remove the issue from their lives.
Read the full story here.



