Task force: Kansas schools should ban cellphones

Members of the Kansas State Board of Education say they want to offer guidelines to local districts but don’t plan to impose statewide restrictions. Cellphone policies, like budget or curriculum decisions, are ultimately up to local school boards.

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State News

October 24, 2024 - 2:11 PM

The Blue Ribbon Task Force on Student Screen Time voted to recommend that districts prohibit students from using cellphones for the entire school day, including during lunch and passing periods. Photo by Rose Conlon/KMUW/Kansas News Service

WICHITA, Kansas — An advisory group created by Kansas education leaders is recommending that schools ban cellphones for students at every grade level.

A majority of the 36-member Blue Ribbon Task Force on Student Screen Time voted to recommend that districts prohibit students from using cellphones for the entire school day, including during lunch and passing periods.

They also voted to recommend that students store personal devices “in a secure location that is not accessible to them during the school day.”

The group meets again this week and plans to make its final report with recommendations to the Kansas State Board of Education in November.

Derby teacher Tawna Hall serves on the task force and supports “bell-to-bell” policies that ban cellphones. She said her school allows students to use their phones between classes, but she still spends class time managing phones and other devices.

“Regardless of how much we want to believe that we can teach them to do differently, if they have access, they will get on it,” Hall said. “And they will do it over and over again.”

STATE SCHOOL board members directed the task force to study and discuss issues related to electronic devices and the effect of social media on students’ mental health. The group includes students, teachers, parents and school leaders.

As part of their research, task force members read and discussed “The Anxious Generation,” a book by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt that looks at connections between increased screen time and the epidemic of adolescent mental illness.

Ava Gustin, a student at Mission Valley High School, southwest of Topeka, voted in favor of bell-to-bell phone bans because she said students need time away from screens.

“I’m really, personally, worried about my generation and how we interact with each other,” she said. “I think it’s important that we have that face-to-face interaction, and … hands-on learning that isn’t all on the screen.”

Gustin shared with the task force that she was diagnosed with an eating disorder as a sophomore.

“I strongly believe that if phones weren’t so prevalent in my high school or so prevalent in society, that this wouldn’t have been so harmful for me,” she said. “I just encourage you to think about students that are struggling … because they feel like the phones are surrounding them all the time.”

State school board members said they want to offer guidelines to local districts but don’t plan to impose statewide restrictions. Cellphone policies, like budget or curriculum decisions, are ultimately up to local school boards.

SOME TASK force members voiced concerns about a total ban on cellphones.

“I need to be able to text my parents … or my boss. If a practice is canceled really last minute, I need to be able to communicate that,” said Ananya Argawal, a student in the Blue Valley district near Kansas City.

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