Banning cellphones in schools gains popularity in red and blue states
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[January 16, 2025]
By ANDREW DeMILLO
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas' Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee
Sanders and California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom have little in
common ideologically, but the two have both been vocal supporters of an
idea that's been rapidly gaining bipartisan ground in the states:
Students' cellphones need to be banned during the school day.
At least eight states have enacted such bans over the past two years,
and proposals are being considered in several more states this year.
Here is a look at the push by states for such bans.
Why are states banning cellphones at schools?
The push for cellphone bans has been driven by concerns about the impact
screen time has on children’s mental health and complaints from teachers
that cellphones have become a constant distraction in the classroom.
Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, who has called on Congress to require
warning labels on social media platforms about their effects on young
people’s lives, has said schools need to provide phone-free times.
Nationally, 77% of U.S. schools say they prohibit cellphones at school
for non-academic 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.
Kim Whitman, co-founder of the Phone Free Schools Movement, said the
issue is catching on because parents and teachers in both red and blue
states are struggling with the consequences of kids on mobile devices.
“It doesn't matter if you live in a big city or a rural town, urban or
suburban, all children are struggling and need that seven-hour break
from the pressures of phones and social media during the school day,”
she said.
What states are enacting bans?
At least eight states — California, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana,
Minnesota, Ohio, South Carolina and Virginia — have enacted measures
banning or restricting students’ use of cellphones in schools.
The policies range widely. Florida was the first state to crack down on
phones in school, passing a 2023 law that requires all public schools to
ban cellphone use during class time and block access to social media on
district Wi-Fi.
A 2024 California law requires the state’s nearly 1,000 school districts
to create their own cellphone policies by July 2026.
Several other states haven't banned phones, but have encouraged school
districts to enact such restrictions or have provided funding to store
phones during the day.
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A student uses a cell phone after unlocking the pouch that secures
it from use during the school day at Bayside Academy, Aug. 16, 2024,
in San Mateo, Calif. (Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle via AP,
File)
Sanders announced a pilot program last year providing grants to
schools that adopt phone-free policies, and more than 100 schools
signed on. In her state of the state address this week, Sanders
proposed an outright ban.
“We will ban cellphones in our schools, bell to bell, so that our
kids are not distracted, in class or out of it,” Sanders said.
Other governors recently calling for bans include Kelly Ayotte of
New Hampshire, who was sworn in this month, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds
and Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has
suggested she'll seek a statewide policy, but has not offered
specifics.
What is the opposition to the bans?
The cellphone bans have faced opposition from some parents who say
they need to be able to contact their children directly in case of
emergency.
Some parents have pointed to recent school shootings where having
access to cellphones was the only way some students were able to
communicate with loved ones for what they thought might be the last
time.
But supporters of the bans have noted that students' phones could
pose additional dangers during an emergency by distracting students
or by revealing their location during an active shooter situation.
Parents opposed to the ban have also said they want their children
to have access to their phones for other needs, such as coordinating
transportation.
Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union, said she
agrees about the dangers of social media on children but that the
bans sought by states are taking too broad of an approach. Banning
the devices during the school day is not going to solve underlying
issues like bullying or the dangers of social media, she said.
“We have not done our job as grown-ups to try to teach our kids the
skills they need to actually navigate this technology,” she said.
“We've just kicked the can down the road and thrown them into the
deep end of the pool when they're by themselves after school.”
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Associated Press writers Hannah Fingerhut, Margery Beck, Holly Ramer
and Anthony Izaguire contributed to this report.
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