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Los Angeles Unified School District Bans Cellphones, Social Media

The Los Angeles Unified School District board voted 5-2 to ban cellphone and social media use during the day amid protests from educators.

The ban in Los Angeles public schools will take effect in spring 2025 and goes beyond previous school district policies that only banned cellphones during class and limited social media to “educational purposes.” The ban comes after a Pew Research Center investigation. Showing 72% of American high school teachers believe that cell phone use is a “major problem in the classroom.” I got it. The previous policy was put into place in 2011 but proved relatively ineffective in the face of the explosion in smartphone use over the past decade, according to CNN.

“Students are just as glued to their phones as adults,” said Nick Melvoin, a school board member who supports the ban. “They’re furtively scrolling during class. They’re walking down the hallways with their heads in their hands. They’re not talking to or playing with each other at lunch or recess because they’re wearing AirPods.”

District members support the ban I have written Research has shown that “excessive mobile phone use can affect adolescents’ mental health and well-being, leading to increased stress, anxiety, depression, sleep problems, feelings of aggression and suicidal thoughts.”

“Research has shown that limiting mobile phone use and access to social media during class improves academic performance and has a positive impact on students’ mental health,” they say. Added.

Parents expressed concern that a blanket ban could put children at risk in the event of an emergency.

“It’s certainly something that a number of parents have expressed concern to me about during emergencies and in communications with parents,” Melvoin said. “I think it’s the first thing we think about, it’s a sign of the very tragic times we’re living in, and we all need to do more in this country when it comes to preventing gun violence and keeping our students safe.”

Board members said the ban could be implemented differently at different schools. Some schools might require them to be stored in students’ lockers, while others might require them to be kept in magnetic pouches. The district also acknowledged it would have to develop a proper system for notifying parents in case of an emergency. Other parents and administrators also expressed concern that non-English speaking students might need cellphones as translators.

“Every school will be different,” says Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Jackie Goldberg, “but the idea is pretty simple: If you bring your phone to school, you put it away — in your locker or in your purse … and then pick it up on the way home.”

by Los Angeles TimesAdministrator Hope This ban will increase socialization and further reduce bullying.

“The resolution also references a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that found that 16 percent of high school students in the United States student “In 2021, 100% of students reported being bullied via text message or social media in the past year,” the report said. “Social media has become a convenient platform for bullying, but because mobile phones and social media can also be used at other times of the day, it is unclear to what extent banning mobile phones during class would change bullying.”

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