The Daily Telegraph

The head banning tech – and bringing back textbooks

As the headmaster who banned screens now leads a return to textbooks, India Sturgis explores his tech-free prep school

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Stepping into the office of Mr Peter Phillips – freshly anointed as Britain’s best prep school head – feels like stepping back in time. Hung along the walls are sketches of bespectacl­ed former head boys, a clarinet sits in an open case, and a tartan ottoman heaves with teapots and pastries. But more unusual for the head of a busy school of 261 day pupils and boarders is that he has no computer, laptop or mobile phone. A landline receiver sticks out among papers on his mahogany desk.

This lack of technology is no accident. Mr Phillips is leading by example, as one the few heads brave (many might say foolhardy) enough to insist on not just a digital detox but an all-out blackout in the classroom. Smartphone­s are banned and other technology such as laptops and tablets are restricted at S. Anselm’s, an independen­t prep school and college for three- to 16-year-olds, set in bucolic Peak District countrysid­e, which costs up to £24,900 a year and has just been recognised in Tatler’s School Awards.

Mr Phillips is in good company, given that Bill Gates, Microsoft’s founder, and Apple’s Steve Jobs heavily restricted their own children’s tech-time. (Gates didn’t allow them to use mobiles until they were 14 and banned tech at mealtimes, while Jobs limited use of ipads at home because he thought they were addictive.)

The threats facing schools have changed. Walk through playground­s or corridors and, instead of happy chatter, shrieks and whoops, you’ll be met by the tap-tap-tapping of buttons, faces illuminate­d by screens and pings from incoming Snapchats.

Yet the problems faced by a generation of screen junkies hooked on devices are well documented. The Office for National Statistics found that children who spent three hours or more on social media during the school day reported more than twice the number of mental health problems as those who spent no time online. Doctors have likened the effects of tech addiction on young minds to cocaine dependence. Reliance can breed anxiety, fuel low self-esteem and give bullies an anonymous 24/7 playground. So it’s for those such as Mr Phillips, who are leading the charge against the new digital order, that we should be grateful.

“I firmly believe that electronic devices of any type have no place in childhood,” he confirms. “Phones are a burden and self-absorbing. What I want is for children to be unburdened and not distracted so they can concentrat­e on each other. When TV first came about, there was this obsession with only watching a certain amount in case it was bad for your brain. Now, we are dealing with a not dissimilar problem.”

If S. Anselm’s pupils want to call home, they can use a landline in the school office. Anyone found with an illegal device is suspended – something that has happened just twice in four years; two strikes and you’re out. The policy, he admits, doesn’t make him popular; still, he doesn’t “see anyone weeping in the corridors because they have no phone”, and says it has fostered a happier, freer climate within which children can exercise their imaginatio­n.

Six years ago, he banned phones at his previous school, Cundall Manor in Yorkshire, and the Department of Education estimates a third of schools have followed suit. At an Independen­t Associatio­n of Prep Schools conference this year, he was just one of two heads out of 60 to outlaw smartphone­s. “I was looked upon as though I was some sort of fruitcake,” laughs Phillips, described by the Good Schools Guide as not belonging “to the pinstriped, lapeltuggi­ng, bullfrog school of heads”. But he also has the parents to contend with.

“The other real problem for parents is their inability to say no. It has got worse over the years. Some parents are frightened of their children. It might be guilt. It might be that they both work, maybe they find it hard to balance work and life and as a consequenc­e find it difficult to say no. But children do respond well to being told no.”

On the whole, it has gone down well. His announceme­nt of the plan to ban phones at a school speech day five years ago, soon after he had joined as S. Anselm’s headmaster, was met by applause from parents. Last week, a mother from York told him she had chosen S. Anselm’s because of the ban.

The question of whether it causes children to binge when they get home, he says, is out of his hands, but the hours they spend at school should be free from digital pressures.

A growing body of evidence supports the stance. According to a 2015 study by the London School of Economics, at schools where phones are banned, scores improved 6.4 per cent for 16-year-olds and by 12.2 per cent for lower-achieving students.

Gradually, others are picking up the mantle, too. This summer, Stroud High School announced a ban on phones and smartwatch­es to ease pressure on body image. The head of Wensleydal­e School in Yorkshire had planned to install a jamming system to block signals, until she realised it was illegal.

It’s not just phones that encroach on learning; Mr Phillips is worried about textbooks disappeari­ng. “The demise in textbooks is serious, and soon they will have gone completely because everything is heading online,” he says.

Last month, a TES-YOUGOV survey revealed that fewer than one in 10 teachers thought they’d still be using textbooks in most or all lessons by 2020, and Nick Gibb, the Schools Minister, has previously lambasted the growing “anti-textbooks ethos” in schools to cut costs.

While subjects such as history or geography lend themselves to new media, for others, such as English, textbooks are irreplacea­ble. “They change how you digest things and slow the process down,” says Mr Phillips. “It gives children security. Something to revise from. We are very textbook-driven. A nice healthy balance is hugely important.”

He is at pains to make clear he’s not advocating a return to the Dark Ages. The school has an innovation studio filled with robotic equipment, 3D printers and computers. They teach coding and programmin­g from age six and over-13s are allowed laptops in some lessons under supervisio­n.

More, it’s about children learning to self-regulate their screen time and developing and maintainin­g an awareness of life outside devices.

“What we are trying to create, and have created, is an oasis where children can be children for as long as possible,” says Mr Phillips

As morning break begins, we wander through the school, weaving in between children spilling out of classrooms, arm-in-arm. Two boys queue up to show Mr Phillips their swimming medals. Noise fills the halls as pupils catch up with friends face-to-face, concerned only with real life playing out in front of them.

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 ??  ?? Screen-free: at S. Anselm’s, left, digital devices are banned in order to ensure that ‘children can be children for as long as possible’
Screen-free: at S. Anselm’s, left, digital devices are banned in order to ensure that ‘children can be children for as long as possible’
 ??  ?? Innovative: S. Anselm’s headmaster, Peter Phillips, top, believes that children should be taught from textbooks
Innovative: S. Anselm’s headmaster, Peter Phillips, top, believes that children should be taught from textbooks

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