BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Connecticut lawmakers approve bill for cell phone ban in schools
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Sat, 2 May 2026 09:35:54 -0500
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Connecticut lawmakers approve bill for cell phone ban in schools  but critics 
argue that having different rules for adults and students is not good role 
modeling at all

Date:
Fri, 01 May 2026 13:20:44 +0000

Connecticut has taken a big step closer to outright banning phones during the 
school day, but reactions to the news are mixed.

As reported by the CT Insider (via The Sun ), lawmakers there have pushed 
through a bill that would require students to have their phones switched off 
and put away from the first bell until the last, with schools being able to 
decide whether the phones would be stored in backpacks, lockers, or locked 
pouches during that period. The bill still needs to pass before it will be 
signed into law, but with 35 other states already having some kind of legal 
cell phone restriction in schools, it seems fairly likely that this will get 
the backing it needs.

This also follows the recent news that England is planning to ban phones in 
schools by law, as reported by the BBC . So this isnt just a shift in US 
attitudes  its more global. 

That said, its worth noting that the majority of schools in both the US and 
the UK already have restrictions in place; theyre just done on a 
school-by-school or regional basis, rather than being an actual law  and in 
many cases theyre not full bans. 

So, how much will change in practice remains to be seen, but its likely that 
these laws will make the bans more complete and perhaps easier to enforce. 
Surveys and studies suggest it's the right choice.

The big question is how much difference that will make to the 
school experience, but while theres some debate over whether it would be a 
positive or negative change, most data suggests it should improve things.

For example, a recent EdWeek Research Center survey of 79 district leaders, 
122 school leaders, and 395 teachers found that 69% reported cell phone 
restrictions had a positive impact on behavior in the classroom, 70% found it 
had a positive impact on engagement in learning, 64% on overall wellbeing, 
63% on learning and mastering content and skills, and 63% on social-emotional 
skills development. 

The only area where most respondents said it had no real impact was 
attendance, which makes sense. 

Plus, a report from the Paragon Health Institute cites several other studies 
that also show the positive impacts of banning cell phone use in schools, 
including that the change was associated with a 6.4% increase in national 
exam scores in the UK.

There are, however, some potential downsides too. The same report highlights 
things like safety and emergency communication concerns, losing easy 
day-to-day parent-child communication, costs involved in enforcing bans, such 
as by purchasing expensive pouches to lock phones in, and concerns about the 
stress and separation anxiety that being parted from their phones could cause 
students. 

Plus, some teachers report integrating cell phone use into lessons, with, for 
example, them being used for research or collaborative projects, especially 
when school internet connections are slow or when a schools firewall blocks 
educational websites and tools. 

The Suns report on the plans in Connecticut also suggests parents and 
government officials there are split, with some supporting the proposed ban 
and others pointing out potential issues. 

For example, Rep. Christie Carpino, a Cromwell Republican, argued that a 
one-size-fits-all approach isnt ideal, saying our 5-year-olds should be 
treated a lot differently than our 18-year-old students, while Republican 
Rep. Lezlye Zupkus noted that we tell kids to do as I say, not as I do. Thats 
basically what this is doing. Teachers and administrators can walk around 
with their cell phones, but students cant. This is not good role modeling at 
all in our schools. 

So, its a complicated, nuanced issue, but it seems that both the US and some 
other countries are moving ever closer to blanket cell phone bans in schools, 
so whether good or bad, its a change thats probably coming.
 
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/phones/connecticut-lawmakers-approve-bill-for-cell-p
hone-ban-in-schools-but-critics-argue-that-having-different-rules-for-adults-a
nd-students-is-not-good-role-modeling-at-all

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--- MultiMail/DOS
 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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