Dayton Daily News

Law bans smartphone­s through the 9th grade

- Alissa J. Rubin and Elian Peltier

PARIS — The eighth-grade girls already know what to expect from France’s new smartphone ban in all primary and middle schools because their school voluntaril­y instituted one last year.

“Annoying,” was the assessment of Zoélinh Masson, 12, as her friend Grace Blahourou, 13, agreed.

Still, they said that with no smartphone­s, students did talk to one another more.

France’s education ministry hopes that its smartphone ban, which took effect at the beginning of September and applies to students from first through ninth grades, will get schoolchil­dren to pay more attention in class and interact more, and several studies suggest such correlatio­ns.

Some experts are skeptical the ban can be enforced, and some teachers question the merits of insulating children from the internet-dominated world they will face outside school. But the French government believes that without minimizing distractio­ns, children will never learn the basics.

“If we want to prepare children in the 21st century, we must give them the tools of modernity: mastery of math, of general culture, the ability to flourish in social relationsh­ips, a capacity to discuss with others, to understand and respect others and then very strong digital skills,” said Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer.

“It’s a message we send to society: Do not always be on your phones.”

The smartphone ban expands on a current law that applied only to junior high grades and forbade the use of smartphone­s during class. The new law includes lower grades and will also apply to the entire school grounds, including the schoolyard. The only exception is when use of smartphone­s is assigned by a teacher.

Around 93 percent of French children ages 12 to 17 have mobile phones, and an estimated 86 percent in that age group have models that support apps, according to French government and research institute data from 2016 and 2017.

Just under two-thirds of middle school and junior high students are signed up on social networks like Instagram and Snapchat and video games like Fortnite.

The problems with smartphone use are well known. Students’ insecurity can rise as they constantly worry about keeping up with “likes” and “shares” on social media. Teachers worry about cyberbully­ing and abusive practical jokes like photograph­ing classmates from under the bathroom door and then posting the images online.

France is rare in legislatin­g a solution. In Denmark, legislator­s are examining a similar approach, but have said they do not want to put it into law. In Britain, each school makes its own rules. And in New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio won points three years ago when he lifted a school cellphone ban put in place under his predecesso­r, Michael Bloomberg.

In New York, as in many American school districts, parents want to be able to check on their children throughout the day. And in school shootings in the U.S., students have often used their phones to call 911.

In France, where there have been no school shootings, few parents have objected to the ban. The law, a campaign promise of President Emmanuel Macron, flew through the legislatur­e this summer with strong support from parents and many teachers.

About 60 percent of French junior high schools already had similar bans, said Frédérique Rolet, the secretary-general of a national teachers union.

Under the new law, students can bring phones to school but must keep them out of sight in their bags or lockers. If they are caught using them, the phones can be confiscate­d for a day.

Yet students say they know how to get around the ban.

Grace, the eighth-grader, said that even after her school introduced its rule last year, she continued to film her friends for Snapchat and Instagram. She just did it clandestin­ely.

Both she and her classmate Zoélinh say they take their phones to school even though they are not allowed to use them there.

“In theory I could leave it at home and pick it up after school, but I’d be missing something,” Zoélinh said. “I would not feel good at all.”

Grace added, half joking, “We’d be depressed.”

Teachers also doubt whether the ban is enforceabl­e, especially with young teenagers for whom rebellion often trumps any inclinatio­n to follow instructio­ns.

“I just don’t know how the law will be put in place,” said Cécile Dhondt, who teaches students who have trouble keeping up in class at College Jean Jaurès middle school in a suburb of Lille, in northern France.

As for taking away phones if students refuse to put them away, she said, “If I confiscate­d them, my students would not come anymore to class, and that is not the objective.”

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