• FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    There’s ample evidence that social media and smartphone addiction affects developing brains significantly worse than it affects fully-developed brains.

    Banning cell phone use in school is a good thing.

    • mycodesucks@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Critics don’t want to hear that young people whose brains aren’t fully developed yet have poorer impulse control than adults…

      But young people whose brains aren’t fully developed yet have poorer impulse control than adults.

      • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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        7 days ago

        We don’t want to lose our rights because of shoddy neuroscience being misinterpreted for political gain

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      7 days ago

      On the “different rules for adults and students” thing… if the adults model responsible cell phone use, i.e. never in the classrooms or hallways during school hours, never “ducking out” to their car or the teachers’ lounge just for B.S. doom scrolling or un-necessary calls, IMO that would be much stronger than just banning phones on-prem for kids and adults alike.

      The real key: you should control your cell phone, it should not control you - same thing as so many other addiction problems. And, there will be addicts who genuinely are incapable of controlling it, and cold turkey tee-total zero usage has been shown to be the most effective answer for them - just like alcoholism, not drinking is nothing to be ashamed of, having a problem and drinking anyway is much much worse.

    • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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      6 days ago

      Maybe that’s an issue with social media and the other apps on children’s phones, and not the phones themselves. So maybe it requires a combination of regulation on social media, plus better awareness from parents, instead of a blanket ban on a technology tangentially related to the problem.

    • Hiro8811@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      There’s ample evidence that drugs addiction affects developing brains significantly worse than it affects fully-developed brains.

      Banning drugs use in school is a good thing.

      • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Banning drugs use in school is a good thing.

        You’re right. Nothing that isn’t perfect is worth doing.

        I guess we should just wait to act until every student can’t focus on something for more than 30 seconds instead of 60. Definitely a better idea because, after all, just ignoring the problem always works.

        • Hiro8811@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          Oh right cause the war on drugs totally worked. My point is that addressing the consequences won’t solve the problem, like those children’s won’t go home and be glued to their phones.

          • MangoCats@feddit.it
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            7 days ago

            like those children’s won’t go home and be glued to their phones.

            if they can put them down for 6 hours a day, that’s huge progress over saturating in it every waking hour.

          • mycodesucks@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            It’s not about enforcing behavior. Not primarily. It’s about setting a precedent of what is important.

            There’s a huge difference between “They didn’t let me drink underage but I did it anyway and became an alcoholic.” and “They explicitly let me drink and I became an alcoholic.”

            The former AUTOMATICALLY comes with increased caution from even the people who break the rules. And more importantly, it completely removes the “I didn’t know” from the equation. Personal acceptance of the consequences of one’s actions is the first step to fixing it later, but with no rules, it’s easy to get bogged down in “Nobody stopped me. It’s THEIR fault.”

            • Hiro8811@lemmy.world
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              6 days ago

              I’m not saying it’s a bad thing but it’s like keeping an eye on your alcoholic friend for 6 hours then just leaving and letting him help himself on the drinks cabinet. It shifts the blame from the problem to the victim. Yeah it’s a good start but these children are already addicted at very young ages. Also it’s not like this problem is only affecting kids, adults are affected as well.

    • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      This take is giving: 🙈

      “If we don’t see it, it’s not happening and yay we saved the kids!”

    • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      fully agree. Most CT schools already have banned cellphones, theyre just adopting it on a state level.

        • jj4211@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          My kid goes to school where they recently instituted this strategy.

          It feels like I’ve seen a marked improvement in their social behaviors.

          Between smartphones and the COVID years, this generation has had it rough for social development…

  • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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    7 days ago

    Yeah! Kids shouldn’t have different rules than adults! Same rules for all ages!

    Sincerely,

    The Pedophiles

    • CultLeader4Hire@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Yeah wtf? TONS of things have a set of rules for adults and kids, that’s literally what being a minor means… how is this a bad thing? Adults aren’t kids, kids aren’t adults… why should they be treated the same?

    • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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      7 days ago

      The pedophiles are the ones making these rules. (Source: the Epstein files) isolation enables abuse, and these policies aren’t being made in a vacuum but as part of a comprehensive attack on access to information and connection

  • fartographer@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Texan here, working for a school district where these types of laws have already been implemented: I’m pretty sure it’s about controlling narratives, not improving education.

    Kids use their phones to fact-check teachers, record teachers improperly addressing students, record fights, and verifiably report on very real issues within the school. I haven’t seen any educational benefits from banning cell phones, only that it’s been easier to sweep stories under the rug and to refute concerning complaints from children in need.

        • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 days ago

          I live in CT, and I guess I’ll just lie about what I see and hear too?

          We mine as well live in different countries tbh

          • fartographer@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            We mine as well live in different countries tbh

            I absolutely agree. My nephews went to pre-K in Connecticut, and the opportunities available to them absolutely blew my mind. I genuinely believe that there was a measurable dip in their academic progress when my sibling moved back to Texas.

            From the metrics side of things, I work with one of the larger districts in Texas, build a lot of reports for the district, and work very closely with the district directors of communication and other leadership. From this perspective, I can tell you that there are a lot of potentially messy scenarios that were addressed before the public ever heard about them. But after these cell phone laws, the amount of resources that went into “crisis response” have plummeted, and moved instead into marketing. Primarily because it’s harder to report and verify incidents without concrete evidence.

            Part of these new cell phone laws, and what got a lot of buy-in from districts, was that kids were recording fights in the bathrooms, and that preventing kids from recording the fights would remove the incentive to fight because there wouldn’t be video to upload to social media. But, we haven’t seen a decrease in the number of kids getting written up for fighting; we’ve only had a decrease of community outcry, because they don’t see the fights anymore.

            I argue that these cell phone laws were never intended to modify the quality of education or increase the safety of the students, but that they were always intended to merely take away the kids’ ability to verifiably report incidents, or expose issues to the public. Outta sight, outta mind, right? If this were really about getting students to disconnect while they were in school, we wouldn’t give every kid a Chromebook, on which they can look up ridiculous shit, send stupid messages, and leverage LLMs to do all their work for them.

            I don’t think that the communities in Texas nor in Connecticut support these laws with the intent to silence their children, and to have blinders put on them. And even if the educational boards and lawmakers in Connecticut aren’t as malicious as the ones here in Texas, they’ll still unintentionally muzzle the students as a side effect.

            • Washedupcynic@lemmy.ca
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              6 days ago

              I lived in Dallas for 3 years while I was doing a postdoctoral fellowship. Kids in Dallas were going to class in trailers. I was also moonlighting doing curriculum design for TX state testing. I would have to grade sample questions answered by students, and like 90% of the responses I got from high schoolers indicated they were barely literate. (FWIW my background is in neuroscience/cognition, not education, and I was developing science test questions for standardized tests.) I opted not to have my family move down to Dallas during the fellowship after seeing how bad education was there.

              • fartographer@lemmy.world
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                6 days ago

                There are lots of areas like that throughout Texas, unfortunately. In a disappointing number of the campuses in San Antonio, some of the lowest performing schools are the only place where many students get to eat, get new clothes that fit, enjoy HVAC, and not get assaulted by family or neighbors. Many of those schools have unofficial metrics that they prioritize: were the kids safe, did they eat, did they talk to someone if they needed help? What is considered a monumental success in those schools is if the teacher says something that low-performing students find engaging enough to write down.

                These are the schools that the state is shutting down. Many of the students are left in a lurch without a safe way to get to their new school. These are generally in areas with high minority representation. It’s almost like Texas’s goal is to fail specific groups of kids.

            • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 days ago

              I read all this, and I can only think about my time in school pre cell phone.

              I think about how today, there are in house couselling service centers in nearly every school in the state, staffed by mandated reporters. My school counselor is the reason my abuser went to jail, she helped me.

              I dont believe they are taking away thier voice. We all have that. I teach my kid to use his, he’s not muzzled.

              We can disagree, we do, and that is okay. I just think the positives outweigh the negatives. Phones were banned in High school when I went (grad. '06) and theyve been banned at my sons school already for years.

              The state is just aligning with what most districts have already done here. I appreciate you saying you dont think lawmakers intend to harm children (but they are). least we agree half way?

              • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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                6 days ago

                I commented to ask why you posted a comment that added nothing to the conversation. The first comment you replied to made a valid comparison to where the laws in question have already been implemented. Instead of engaging with that productively, you rudely dismissed it out of hand.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      6 days ago

      i suspected it as much. teens have been recording inappropiate behaviour by school admistrations. any statutory rape, relationship they dont want that to hit neews. before cellphones, i caught 1-2 professors/instructers using outdated or misinformed facts in bio. this probably where its good to fact check

    • jj4211@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Phone use can be “banned” while allowing them to have phones on their person for emergencies.

      Just banning them being out.

      • ParlimentOfDoom@piefed.zip
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        6 days ago

        That’s already school policy in every school, and has been for literally decades now.

        You don’t need a law for that.

    • cosmos8188@leminal.space
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      6 days ago

      Exactly, people are at gunpoint, and yet this post is filled with slippery-slope propaganda. Its classic Lemmy, too unrestrained to realise discrimination applies everywhere.

  • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    I’m always confused by this as “back in my day” teachers would just take our devices away if they were chasing distractions.

    Then again that was back in the 2000s before smart phones and wifi everywhere.

    Young people are kinda cooked I guess. Between nic vapes and brainrot they are in for a rough time.

    • Raiderkev@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Same, we had texting and snake, but if the teacher saw you doing either (aside from maybe shop class) they would confiscate it til the end of class.

      • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 days ago

        True that, before though I’d say it was a low flame, now it’s like medium high, the brainrot is much worse now than ever. If you go into the tech without any guidance you’re just fucked.

    • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      Really shouldn’t be a ban. Just have teachers do what they always do take away the distraction and return it at end of class.

      The second a fucking cell phone ban in schools hit at a legal level. Its just going to fucking evolve into regulations and bans around cell phone use for us plebians at work. Which will then be used to punish and attack people.

      Bans for kids rarely stay that way.

      • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        5 days ago

        Alot of company’s have cell phone rules btw, my mom works in a factory, they can’t use their devices other than during breaks. They can write you up and fire you as long as there’s written rules and shit.

    • dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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      6 days ago

      Yeah, not sure what the bill does when phones are already banned in schools by teachers? (I’m a headline reader so maybe i missed the reasoning)

      Young people are either cooked OR the easy access to vast knowledge could help them out. So maybe all we will see is the IQ distribution become much weirder (only people on far sides of the graph, nothing in the middle).

      Damn I make good theories.

      • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 days ago

        The problem is just like any generation there’s the kids who will take advantage of the resources available to them to better themselves, and then there’s the kids that just absorb the brain rot and end up just cooked.

        It was fine when they could be contained in factories and kept occupied like the drones they were turned into. Now the drones just wander around causing trouble.

  • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    Hopefully only smart phones. I don’t care what the school says, my kid will have a flip phone or something so they can contact me and take pics and video. Like everyday a new grooming case comes out and they want less surveillance?

    • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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      7 days ago

      Now you see why they want bans. Phone cameras filming abuses of power is one of the most powerful civil rights advances ever. These phone bans are designed to harm children

    • BygoneNeutrino@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      If this is the reason you want a cell phone, your efforts are misplaced. Most of these sort of sex offenders are parents, relatives, or friends of the family. Those are the people your kid would need to record.

      You would be more likely to protect your child by making him wear a helmet along with his seatbelt or feeding him food that doesn’t suck.

  • HexesofVexes@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Agreed - no cell phones in school, for anyone. If someone needs to contact me while I’m teaching they can go through our admin team!

  • DupaCycki@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I could see this making sense if the American education system wasn’t already broken beyond repair. Otherwise it doesn’t improve education. Simply gives more control to corrupt schools.

    In my country a similar cellphone ban in schools has been implemented. Except in our schools kids actually learn quite a lot. It’s far from perfect, but far from terrible too. It may or may not have a noticeable impact on students’ performance. That remains to be seen, since it was implemented fairly recently. Perhaps scores from this year will indicate either an increase or a decrease.

    Though of course, politicians are unlikely to care and even if it ultimately leads to a decline, they won’t cancel it.

  • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Hot take but phone ban is schools is bad. We ought to teach kids how to use the phones properly as clearly personal computers are never going away and are fundamental part of our existence.

    I know it’s hard, I know that teachers will struggle but it’s clearly an important investment as we’re never going back to a pre personal computer world. It might change shape from a phone to a watch or something but it’s never going away.

    • 5gruel@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Really a non sequitur. you could have one course “healthy use of new technology” and ban it for the rest of the school day for distraction-free learning.

      • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        You could but you could also train real world practice. Example of this I really like is Japans school cleaning structures where kids learn and practice cleaning and taking care of their surroundings - because we all will need environment maintenance skills forever (or until personal robots).

        I know it’s not a exact comparison but developing crucial skills and more importantly practicing them is what peak education looks like.

        For phone example this would be developing and enforcing phone culture so it caries on out of school. Kids can ignore a single class but a culture shaped within the school will stay with them forever.

  • Butterphinger@lemmy.zip
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    7 days ago

    All kids are anarchists until radicalized with capitalism.

    However, it isn’t 2012 anymore and the kid of today has no real autonomy outside of forced, walled gardens. Most will never see a laptop that isn’t chained up.

    To anyone saying kids will rebel and fix the issue themselves,… with what?

    In our day, we had a PC in the house and freely available resources everywhere, and 3-4 years of World of Warcraft to introduce us to computers.

  • flandish@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    don’t forget - schools are there to make moldable employees. not solid adult humans. banning cell phones seems to align with the working industry’s rules, too.

    • rockstarmode@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      If someone can’t have their mobile device on hand because of stupid employer rules then they need to find a new job.

      I get that you don’t want your team distracted by mobile phone use during work hours, but saying you can’t have one is idiotic. Fuck those employers.

      OTOH kids need to learn that putting the device away to focus is a thing, if they can’t figure it out on their own I’m not against removing the opportunity while they mature.

        • rockstarmode@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Commercial pilots are explicitly trusted to fly expensive and dangerous vehicles, sometimes with hundreds of passengers, over populated areas. They are trained and licensed professionals. If we can’t trust those folks to have a mobile device with them but to make good choices about whether/when to use it in the course of their job, then they shouldn’t be flying anyway.

    • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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      7 days ago

      As a survivor of the education system, I can concur. I don’t want my kids to go through the same system I did.

      • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 days ago

        As a thriver of my education system, I want our education levels back at its peak of the early 2000s.

        Ive a son, currently in middleschool, in CT, and he is not worried about this at all.

        we had early cellphones when I was in highschool, not everyone had one, and they were banned. Go to the librabry computer during your study hall if you really need your fix. Maybe get a book while youre in there.

        • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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          6 days ago

          They censor the internet on the school.computers. back.when I went they censored websites about non christian religion as “occult” I’m violation of the first amendment

  • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Let’s just ban smartphones all together, if you want to send a tweet use T9 like the ancients.