Site icon Attack the System

Can Phone Bans Save America’s Schools?

When New York governor Kathy Hochul started dropping hints a few months ago that she might ban phones in schools across the state, reporter Kevin T. Dugan got interested in what that might actually mean. Phones, after all, are built into the fabric of day-to-day life now, but their negative effects on how kids socialize, learn, and view the world are too big and too dramatic to ignore or blindly accept. But is a simple ban at school too one-size-fits-all or heavy-handed? In addition to interviewing Hochul, Kevin visited schools in New York that have already banned electronic devices on campus, implementing policies that are probably good previews of what might eventually pass in the state as a whole. The kids and teachers he talked to — many of whom were skeptical of the policy at first — seem to be convinced that a full ban is the right way to go. The story one teacher tells of hearing the hallways at his school come back to life after the phones went away is a powerful example of the kind of outcome Hochul is hoping to see in the months and years ahead.

—Jebediah Reed, editor, Intelligencer

Kathy Hochul’s ‘Big’ Plan to Ban Phones in Schools The governor sees both political and educational opportunity. Is she right?

Photo: Dina Litovsky

Read the full story
Enjoying One Great Story
If you’re enjoying our reading recommendations, consider forwarding this newsletter to a friend. If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, you can sign up here.  And subscribe to New York now for unlimited access to all our stories.
 

More From Today

Ellen DeGeneres’s final stand-up performance functioned as a kind of therapy, writes Joe Berkowitz, for both the comedian and her audience.
READ MORE »
What does it take for a friendship to pass the bridesmaid test? The Cut’s Danielle Cohen talks to women whose relationships were ruined after being asked to be part of a friend’s wedding party.
READ MORE »
Angelica Jade Bastién reviews Blink Twice, in which first-time director Zoë Kravitz is so enamored with Channing Tatum that she forgets he’s playing a tech-bro billionaire.
READ MORE »
It’s time for liberals to stop projecting humane beliefs onto the leftist, anti-Zionist protesters who clearly hold bigoted ideas, argues Jonathan Chait.
READ MORE »
And as the DNC begins tonight, Sarah Jones makes the case that the war in Gaza is the defining moral issue of our time and Kamala Harris should commit to an arms embargo.
READ MORE »
 
Exit mobile version