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Less disruption, more playground noise as high school reviews mobile phone ban

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While the idea of ​​banning high school students from using mobile phones is back on the political agenda, many have been doing just that with varied and sometimes unexpected results.

NSW Labor leader Chris Minns has pledged to ban mobile phones in government schools across the state if his party forms government next year, but at Toormina High on the NSW Mid North Coast, a phone ban has come with challenges.

The school has been using lockable phone pouches since 2019 and principal Steve Humphrey says the approach has pros and cons.

“Kids have lost the Yondr pouches that they were issued, and it’s very expensive to replace them,” he said.

“[But] we certainly have less disruption in the classroom and the playground.”

Each morning, students must lock their phones into the neoprene magnetic pouch and then they are unlocked at the end of the school day.

A student unlocking a magnetised phone pouch
The students can unlock the phones at the school gates in the afternoons.(ABC News: Luisa Rubbo )

Mr Humphrey believes an overarching piece of government legislation would help enforce rules about mobile phone use in schools.

“The advantages of having a policy where it’s the government supporting schools certainly strengthens what we do in schools,” he said.

Student safety would also need to be a factor in any blanket mobile phone ban, particularly at schools like his own where students travel significant distances by bus, Mr Humphrey said.

“[A ban] will be problematic in schools like mine because of that travel need,” he said.

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