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‘Close to zero impact’: US study casts doubt on effect of phone ban in schools
(www.theguardian.com)
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When did schools start allowing phones?
When the excuse “but what if my mom needs to call me” started working.
Mom can call the school. It worked for 70 years.
Why does the school have to be the middle-man? Just ban phones during actual classes and let them use it during free periods.
In practice that doesn't work, for the same reasons education hasn't been either. Too few teachers to students, plus the things (phones) are greasily addictive. And we're talking about the youths, lol, dumb-kid brain, most exemplified by teenagers of course. The phase of life that specifically combines "rules are actually just stupid, did you ever notice that?" with "so anyway (I forgot what we were talking about [or any other thing])".
It's really just placing an extremely addictive thing in the pocket of anyone prone to addiction. Kiddos are very naturally weak to resisting those "reward now, consequences later" qualities that drive addiction in the first place. And just like any drug that sells, phones have been engineered (legally, lauded in many ways for doing so) to be super-duper addictive.
"Why don't the children simply smoke the crack pipe in the hallways, between classes, forbidden to do so in class? Why must the school be the middle-man?"
Shallow take homie.