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Teens can’t get off their phones. From phone bans to Yondr pouches, here’s what schools are doing : NPR

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This content discusses the story of Mitchell Rutherford, a former high school biology teacher who quit his job due to the stress caused by his students’ constant smartphone use. Rutherford’s struggle with his students’ phone addiction led to severe mental health problems for him, ultimately affecting his personal life. The content also mentions that some states are considering legislation to address the issue of pervasive phone use in schools. EducationWeek findings show that several states have implemented statewide restrictions on cellphone use in schools, while others have policies requiring districts or schools to create their own bans. One teacher, Rutherford, experienced increased student disengagement during the 2023-2024 academic year, leading him to leave his position. He noted that students were often distracted by their phones, leading to a lack of interaction and feelings of anxiety, depression, and loneliness. Other teachers, like Emily Brisse, have found that school phone bans have allowed them to focus on teaching and reduce the need to constantly monitor phone usage in the classroom. The impact of phone use on student engagement and mental health has been exacerbated by the pandemic, according to educators interviewed by NPR. This content discusses the benefits of phone bans in schools, particularly focusing on student engagement and relationships. It highlights the experiences of educators in Golden Valley, Minnesota, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who have implemented phone collection policies to encourage students to interact with each other and stay focused. The content also mentions how some schools have extended the ban to the entire day, not just during class time. High school English teacher Abbey Osborne shares her insights on how the phone policy has positively impacted student behavior and collaboration. Overall, the content emphasizes the importance of reducing phone distractions in educational settings. This content discusses the challenges that teenagers face in controlling their impulses and managing their smartphone usage. It highlights the impact of not having access to phones during school hours on teenagers’ ability to focus and engage in learning. The content also explores the role of social media in teenagers’ lives and how it can affect their well-being. Additionally, it mentions the importance of developing self-regulation skills in the face of constant notifications. The content is supported by insights from experts in psychology and neuroscience. This content discusses the findings of a 2023 report from Common Sense Media, which revealed that teens receive a median of 237 notifications per day. It highlights how former journalist Julie Scelfo founded the advocacy group Mothers Against Media Addiction after reporting on the increasing suicide rates among children who spend a significant amount of time online. Scelfo believes that smartphones have replaced essential in-person experiences necessary for healthy social, emotional, and academic development. She emphasizes the addictive nature of smartphones and the negative impact of excessive screen time on children’s well-being. The content also touches on Scelfo’s regrets about giving her sons smartphones too early and compares it to exposing children to harmful substances like gambling, alcohol, and drugs. Bu içerikte, çocukların güvenli bir şekilde kullanmalarının zor olduğu ürünlerin yetişkinler tarafından kullanılmasının daha uygun olduğu belirtilmektedir. Birçok okul, öğrencileri cihazlardan uzak tutmak için kilitleyebilen poşetlere yönelmektedir. Yondr adlı şirket, okullara öğrencilerin yanlarında taşıdığı kilitli telefon poşetleri satmaktadır. Bu poşetler gün sonunda bir mıknatısa dokunarak açılmaktadır. Telefon yasaklarının her okul için uygun olmadığı belirtilirken, bazı okullar bu yasakları uygulamak için yeterli kaynağa sahip olmayabilirler. Bazı öğrenciler okuldan sonra kardeşlere bakmak zorunda oldukları için ebeveynlerle koordine olmaları gerekebilir. Yondr poşetlerini kullanan okullarda daha fazla kütüphane kitabı ödünç alındığı, daha fazla sosyalleşme olduğu ve kulüplerin canlandırıldığı belirtilmektedir. This content discusses the benefits of using a translation app for students whose first language is not English during class. It also touches on the importance of students learning to have phones without constantly checking social media. The article includes a story about a teacher who believes in teaching students discipline by confiscating phones if they are used inappropriately in class. It also mentions the importance of students learning self-control and understanding when it is appropriate to use technology. A related image shows students using a special magnet to unlock pouches at an “unlocking base” at school. Bu içerikte, içerik açıklaması oluşturulması konusunda bir Yapay Zeka asistanının nasıl yardımcı olabileceği üzerine bilgiler bulunmaktadır. İçerik açıklaması, bir içeriğin özeti ve anahtar noktalarını kısa ve öz bir şekilde okuyucuya sunarak içeriğin ne hakkında olduğunu anlamalarına yardımcı olur. Yapay Zeka asistanları, içerik oluşturuculara bu süreçte yardımcı olabilir ve içeriğin hedef kitleye daha etkili bir şekilde ulaşmasını sağlayabilir. Bu içerik, içerik açıklaması oluşturmanın önemini vurgulayarak Yapay Zeka asistanlarının bu konuda nasıl destek sağlayabileceği üzerine bilgiler içermektedir.
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Kaynak: www.npr.org

Teachers Emily Brisse, Mitchell Rutherford and Abbey Osborne say they've competed with smartphones for students' attention.

Teachers Emily Brisse, Mitchell Rutherford and Abbey Osborne have competed with smartphones for students’ attention.

Emily Brisse, Mitchell Rutherford and Abbey Osborne/Compiled by NPR


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Emily Brisse, Mitchell Rutherford and Abbey Osborne/Compiled by NPR

Last October, Claire Pauley and her husband Mitchell Rutherford learned they were expecting their first child. However, Rutherford kept forgetting about his wife’s pregnancy. There was something else on his mind.

“I mean, when I went to school, I would forget that we were pregnant and I would come home and I wouldn’t remember until my wife would say something about it,” Rutherford said. “I’d come home and just collapse on the floor. I was suicidal at times.”

Former high school biology teacher Mitchell Rutherford says he'd forget that his wife, Claire Pauley, was pregnant due to stress over students' phone usage

Former high school biology teacher Mitchell Rutherford says he’d forget that his wife, Claire Pauley, was pregnant due to stress over students’ phone usage

Mitchell Rutherford


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Mitchell Rutherford

He was a high school biology teacher in Tucson, Ariz. and his students’ near-constant smartphone use was taking a toll on his well-being. So when summer rolled around after his eleventh year in the classroom — he quit.

“I came to realize that the phone addiction that the students were struggling with was causing severe mental health problems for me, preventing me from being a good husband,” Rutherford said.

Some states are trying to legislate against pervasive phone use in schools. Florida, South Carolina and Louisiana have statewide restrictions — and states like California, Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Virginia have policies requiring districts or schools to create policies banning phones, according to findings from EducationWeek.

During the 2023-2024 academic year, Rutherford says his students were significantly more disengaged. He felt like he wasn’t making a difference.

“Most of the people in the class, they’ve got their headphones in, they’ve got their phones on. They’re not actually listening,” Rutherford said.

He says that as a teacher with ADHD, he fed off the energy of his class.

“I’m really aware of whether someone’s listening to me or paying attention to me.” Rutherford said. “And this year,” he told NPR at the end of the 2023-2024 school year, “I was just like, ‘I can’t…They’re not interested in what I have to say.’ And that, frankly, is the reason that I had to leave.”

In addition to the phone use, students were not interacting with each other, sometimes writing in journal entries that they were anxious, depressed and lonely — which made them burrow further into their devices, Rutherford said.

Finding focus again

Teachers NPR spoke to about phone use in class say students’ inattention and social isolation was made worse during the pandemic.

High school English teacher Emily Brisse says her school's phone ban allowed her to focus on teaching again.

High school English teacher Emily Brisse says her school’s phone ban allowed her to focus on teaching again.

Emily Brisse


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Emily Brisse

“It just got to be really exhausting to deal with phones on a case-by-case situation,” high school English teacher Emily Brisse said. “Nobody goes into education in order to become the phone police. We want to be able to focus on our content.”

Her school in Golden Valley, Minn., was among those that implemented a phone ban in recent years.

Right after it went into effect, she noticed students were more engaged and some admitted in feedback forms they appreciated it.

“[It] forced them to kind of learn how to socialize again, how to be entertained by each other, how to turn toward the learning, even in moments of silence, even in moments of boredom,” Brisse said.

High school English teacher Abbey Osborne says her school's phone policy encourages students to build relationships

High school English teacher Abbey Osborne says her school’s phone policy encourages students to build relationships

Abbey Osborne


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Abbey Osborne

It’s not a bell-to-bell policy — but Brisse is OK with that. Although they are on their phones during passing periods, she said “there’s plenty of chatter in the hallways” as well.

Some schools are taking it a step further — by prohibiting students from accessing devices throughout the entire day, not just during class time.

Once a week, English teacher Abbey Osborne heads to work 10 minutes early for phone-collection duty at her Milwaukee, Wis. high school. Since 2018, her school has collected students’ phones every morning as they come into the building. The phones are returned during the last hour of the day.

“The students are focused. There’s still definitely lots of chatting, lots of relationship building,” Osborne said. “I’ve also found that students are more willing to work together in groups when they don’t have their cell phones.”

At the end of the day when the cell phone bin is delivered to class, Osborne says students crowd around it “like vultures.”

Once the phones are passed back to students, she says they immediately look at them. In her view, that shows that “they don’t have the self-control to be able to handle the demands of school and access to a cell phone.”

They benefit from not having to think about their phones the entire day.

On the basis of age alone, teens already struggle more than adults with controlling their impulses: the brain’s prefrontal cortex, which is involved in impulse control, is one of the latest brain regions to fully mature — and continues to develop into adulthood, according to a 2021 publication in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.

Phones are kept in bins throughout the school day

Phones are kept in bins throughout the school day

Abbey Osborne


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Abbey Osborne

Human brains are also wired for social connection — something that’s often top priority for adolescents — and a lot of it now happens online.

“As an adolescent, you are super primed to social belonging, social validation, status. Also the brain is not fully developed,” said Zach Rausch, lead researcher for social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, whose 2024 book, The Anxious Generation, details the harms of near-constant smartphone usage on young people’s wellbeing.

“So when you combine those things together and you have social media platforms that are all about social validation — it’s hard to stop to regulate yourself,” he says, adding that it’s why teens spend so much time on their phones.

Learning these skills is made even more difficult when facing a near-constant barrage of notifications. A 2023 report from Common Sense Media found that teens received a median of 237 notifications per day.

Former journalist Julie Scelfo started an advocacy organization to get phones out of schools after reporting on their dangers to kids' mental health.

Former journalist Julie Scelfo started an advocacy organization to get phones out of schools after reporting on their dangers to kids’ mental health.

Ryan Lash/TED


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Ryan Lash/TED

Getting phones out of schools

Julie Scelfo founded the advocacy group Mothers Against Media Addiction after reporting on rising suicide rates among children, who are increasingly spending more of their lives online.

Scelfo feels that smartphones have taken the place of in-person experiences that are necessary to build healthy social and emotional health, as well as academic success.

“I thought I could give my kids these products and teach them how to use them safely,” Scelfo said. “But there is no ‘safe’ when they’re designed to be addictive,” she said — noting that “the more time they spend on these platforms, the more money these social media companies make.”

When her three sons first got smartphones, she used parental controls to prevent them from seeing “harmful content,” but regrets not waiting longer to give them smartphones in the first place.

“We don’t take our kids to casinos and say, ‘OK, you can gamble a little, but you should leave.’ We don’t give our kids alcohol to drink or drugs. We recognize that these products are designed in such a way that they’re really hard to use safely, and it’s more appropriate for adults to do that, not children,” Scelfo said.

Many schools are also turning to lockable pouches to keep students off devices.

Students carry lockable Yondr pouches with them throughout the duration of the school day.

Students carry lockable Yondr pouches with them throughout the duration of the school day.

Yondr


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Yondr

A decade ago, Graham Dugoni founded Yondr, which makes and sells locking phone pouches to schools that students carry with them. At the end of day, they tap the pouches on a magnet that unlocks them.

“A lot of the districts and schools that come to us have tried different methods and they end up coming to us because those haven’t worked for one reason or another,” Dugoni said.

When phones are stored in cubbies in classrooms, students still check them in passing periods, he said.

Today, Dugoni says more than 2 million students use pouches in America. He says in schools that use Yondr pouches — more library books are checked out, there’s more socialization and clubs are being revitalized, according to Yondr.

Phone bans aren’t a one-size-fits-all

Despite the seeming benefits of phone bans, schools don’t always have the resources to enforce them. Some students care for siblings after school and need to coordinate with parents. Students whose first language is not English can benefit from using a translation app during class.

If society continues to depend on smartphones, students will eventually need to learn how to have a phone without constantly checking social media.

Students use a special magnet to unlock pouches at an "unlocking base" at school.

Students use a special magnet to unlock pouches at an “unlocking base” at school.

Yondr


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Yondr

Megan Grady teaches eighth grade in Sterling, Ill. and she doesn’t think phones should be banned in the classroom so that her students can learn discipline.

If she sees a phone, she’ll take it and give it back at the end of class. For repeat offenders, she’ll take the phone to the office for a parent or guardian to pick up at the end of the day.

“They need to learn a little bit more self-control,” Grady said. “I think learning from a young age that there’s a time and place to use our technology, I think would benefit them in the long run.”

Teens can’t get off their phones. From phone bans to Yondr pouches, here’s what schools are doing : NPR
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