National to ban cell phones in schools
It’s happening across the world and is backed by a recent UN report and plenty of academics. But is it an old-world solution to a new-world problem and what might younger people think?
Mōrena and welcome to The Bulletin for Wednesday, August 9, by Anna Rawhiti-Connell. Presented in partnership with Z Energy.
In today’s edition: who are BlackRock and what does the deal mean for New Zealand; more GPs urgently needed says new report; Labour’s tax policy announcement slated for Sunday; but first, National’s phone ban announcement will apply at primary, intermediate and secondary schools
Phones to be banned at primary, intermediate and secondary schools
The National party announced this morning that it will introduce a ban on phones in schools. Leader Christopher Luxon said National wanted to “turn around falling achievement” by eliminating “unnecessary disturbances and distractions”. Phones would be banned at schools for the entire day at primary, intermediate and secondary schools. Schools will be able to decide how they enforce it and there will be exceptions for students with health conditions or special circumstances. Responding to a tease of the policy yesterday, education minister Jan Tinetti said that introducing a Government-ordered national ban is unnecessary, and shows a lack of understanding of how schools operate in New Zealand.
Phone bans increasingly embraced around the world
A recent report, published in late July by Unesco said smartphones should be banned in schools to tackle classroom disruption, improve learning and help protect children from cyberbullying. Based on Unesco’s analysis of 200 education systems around the world, it estimated one in four countries had banned smartphones in school, either through law or guidance. National’s proposal follows a ban on phones in schools in multiple states in Australia, the most recent being in New South Wales (NSW). There was some objection to the introduction of the policy in New South Wales with parents concerned about not being able to contact their kids in an emergency. Closer to home, the University of Auckland’s Dr Samantha Marsh spoke to Newshub Nation in late July calling for social media to be treated like any other addictive substance pointing to new research that shows screen-based activities are structurally changing our kids' brains - and not in a good way. Marsh said the first thing New Zealand should do is ban phones in schools.
The counter-arguments
It’s also worth considering some of the counter-arguments to banning phones in schools, the efficacy of leaving enforcement to schools as mooted by National and whether young people should perhaps be involved in the design of these kinds of bans rather than having them enforced from the top down. In Ontario, the question of enforcement is raised frequently and debate still rages among educators about the merits of the ban. One educator described it as a “1960s solution to a 2023 problem”. Writing on phone bans in Australia, Joanne Orlando, a researcher in digital literacy and digital wellbeing at Western Sydney University, observes that in statements from Australian education minister Jason Clare, students were left off the list of those who would be spoken to about a national approach to phone bans. Orlando has also summarised some of the research on whether phone bans result in improved learning outcomes or a decrease in bullying. A collection of studies suggests they don’t. As with research into the impact of social media on young people’s mental health, it’s a tricky area.
What do actual young people think?
The group most likely to object to the ban, school students themselves, are not able to vote, so unless parents reject the idea, it’s likely to be a vote winner for the party. While Orlando points to plenty of videos on TikTok of students busting their phones out of the pouches schools use to lock them away for the day, we also shouldn’t be too quick to assume that young people have unsophisticated views of their relationships with phones. Dear to my heart, as someone who wants to throw her phone into the ocean most days, is Logan Lane. Lane started the “Luddite Club” in Brooklyn, New York and talks about it in this New York Times podcast (gift link). As this article from The Conversation notes, there is a growing movement among Gen Z to embrace “dumb phones”. These teenagers, spoken to in Ottawa following the ban on phones in schools in the Canadian province of Ontario in 2019, express very measured views about their smartphone use. I guess what I’m saying is that while we will no doubt hear from politicians, educators and parents today, to quote Maude Flanders entirely out of context, “Won't someone think of the children!”
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What is BlackRock and why is it investing in New Zealand?
Shanti Mathias has a brilliant explainer on one of the world’s biggest investment firms, following yesterday’s news that the government would be partnering with them on $2bn investment fund to support renewable energy infrastructure. As Mathias notes, the company is not without controversy. The company is still friendly to oil companies and has been accused of hypocrisy and greenwashing. Its Chinese investments are currently being investigated by a congressional select committee in the US. Stuff’s Tom Pullar-Strecker writes that “the challenge in switching to 100% renewables is not a lack of “capital”, but rather a lack of “profitability” for anyone attempting to build the last bit of generation needed to completely phase out fossil fuels.” BusinessDesk’s Dileepa Fonseka (paywalled) writes that “Ultimately, the whole thing seemed much more of a BlackRock initiative than a government one” and that the deal just adds to climate confusion.
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I’m so glad they’re worrying about the big issues like potholes and telling teachers how to do their jobs. It’s not like there’s anything else to worry about like a fucking climate emergency.
People say labour are the nanny state but national seem to be striving for something more dystopian