Monterey Herald

Kids are using phones in class. Should schools ban them all day?

- By Jocelyn Gecker

>> In California, a high school teacher complains that students watch Netflix on their phones during class. In Maryland, a chemistry teacher says students use gambling apps to place bets during the school day.

Around the country, educators say students routinely send Snapchat messages in class, listen to music and shop online, among countless other examples of how smartphone­s distract from teaching and learning.

The hold that phones have on adolescent­s in America today is well-documented, but teachers say parents are often not aware to what extent students use them inside the classroom. And increasing­ly, educators and experts are speaking with one voice on the question of how to handle it: Ban phones during classes.

“Students used to have an understand­ing that you aren't supposed to be on your phone in class. Those days are gone,” said James Granger, who requires students in his science classes at a Los Angeles-area high school to place their phones in “a cellphone cubby” with numbered slots. “The only solution that works is to physically remove the cellphone from the student.”

Most schools already have rules regulating student phone use, but they are enforced sporadical­ly. A growing number of leaders at the state and federal levels have begun endorsing school cellphone bans and suggesting new ways to curb access to the devices.

The latest state interventi­on came in Utah, where Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican, last month urged all school districts and the state Board of Education to remove cellphones from classrooms. He cited studies that show learning improves, distractio­ns are decreased and students are more likely to talk to each other if phones are taken away.

“We just need a space for six or seven hours a day where kids are not tethered to these devices,” Cox told reporters this month. He said his initiative, which is not binding, is part of a legislativ­e push to protect kids in Utah from the harms of social media.

Last year, Florida became the first state to crack down on phones in school. A law that took effect in July requires all Florida public schools to ban student cellphone use during class time and block access to social media on district WiFi. Some districts, including Orange County Public Schools, went further and banned phones the entire school day.

Oklahoma, Vermont and

Kansas have also recently introduced what is becoming known as “phone-free schools” legislatio­n.

And two U.S. senators — Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican, and Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat — introduced legislatio­n in December that would require a federal study on the effects of cellphone use in schools on students' mental health and academic performanc­e. Theirs is one of several bipartisan alliances calling for stiffer rules for social media companies and greater online safety for kids.

Nationally, 77% of U.S. schools say they prohibit cellphones at school for nonacademi­c use, according to the National Center for Education

Statistics.

But that number is misleading. It does not mean students are following those bans or all those schools are enforcing them.

Just ask teachers. “Cellphone use is out of control. By that, I mean that I cannot control it, even in my own classroom,” said Patrick Truman, who teaches at a Maryland high school that forbids student use of cellphones during class. It is up to each teacher to enforce the policy, so Truman bought a 36-slot caddy for storing student phones. Still, every day, students hide phones in their laps or under books as they play video games and check social media.

Tired of being the phone police, he has come to a reluctant conclusion: “Students who are on their phones are at least quiet. They are not a behavior issue.”

A study last year from Common Sense Media found that 97% of kids use their phones during school hours, and that kids say school cellphone policies vary — often from one classroom to another — and aren't always enforced.

For a school cellphone ban to work, educators and experts say the school administra­tion must be the one to enforce it and not leave that task to teachers. The PhoneFree Schools Movement, an advocacy group formed last year by concerned mothers, says policies that allow students to keep phones in their backpacks, as many schools do, are ineffectiv­e.

“If the bookbag is on the floor next to them, it's buzzing and distractin­g, and they have the temptation to want to check it,” said Kim Whitman, a co-founder of the group, which advises schools to require phones be turned off and locked away all day.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kelli Anderson takes attendance from the rear of her Language Arts 9class at Delta High School, Friday, in Delta,
PHOTOS BY RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kelli Anderson takes attendance from the rear of her Language Arts 9class at Delta High School, Friday, in Delta,
 ?? ?? A ninth-grader places his cellphone into a phone holder as he enters class at Delta High School in Delta, Utah, Friday.
A ninth-grader places his cellphone into a phone holder as he enters class at Delta High School in Delta, Utah, Friday.

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