
Quebec to impose full ban on cellphones in schools
Quebec is expected to move ahead with a full ban on cellphones and other electronic devices in schools.
The regulation will apply from the beginning to the end of the school day, including breaks, according to Radio-Canada.
The province has already banned cellphones in classrooms, joining a growing list of provinces with similar policies. That measure took effect on Jan. 1, 2024.
The ban will apply to both public and private schools at the elementary school and high school level.
It will come into effect as of the next school year, and it will be up to each school to decide how to implement the change, Radio-Canada reported.
Education Minister Bernard Drainville will provide more details at a news conference later today.
The ban on cellphones in school was recommended by a special committee that studied the impact of screens on young people.
The committee is due to submit a full report by the end of May, but its members decided last week to issue this first recommendation to give the government and the school network some leeway to implement it quickly.
The committee's final report, which will include all of its recommendations, is expected by May 30.
WATCH | Are cellphones in the classroom hijacking kids' brains?
Are cellphones in the classroom hijacking kids' brains?
1 year ago
Duration 7:27
Quebec has joined Ontario in banning cellphones in the classroom. But are the devices really a distraction for kids, or is that argument flawed? The National's Ian Hanomansing breaks down issues with a parent and teacher on both sides of the debate.
David Bowles, the director general of Collège Charles-Lemoyne on Montreal's South Shore, said his school has had a ban on cellphones in the classroom since 2006. The school implemented a full ban on cellphones during the school day a few years ago.
"At the beginning, there was a reaction from students —- they liked to have that time with their cell phones to chat and play games or whatnot," Bowles told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.
"We explained to them that our goal is for them to socialize among each other, to go play outside."
Bowles said students are supposed to keep their cellphone in their locker and if they are caught using it during the day, it is confiscated.
In implementing the ban, Bowles said it will be important to explain the reasoning behind the change and to have parents and teachers on board.
"We do see some students that become almost addicted to screen time and scrolling through different applications and YouTube and whatnot," said Bowles, who is also head of a federation representing Quebec private schools.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
CUPE National president rips Ottawa's back-to-work order
Video CUPE National President Mark Hancock rips up Ottawa's back-to-work order in front of a cheering crowd of striking Air Canada flight attendants.

Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Air Canada flight attendants on strike, China's new tariff and higher prices for weight-loss drugs in Canada: Business and investing stories for the week of Aug. 17
Getting caught up on a week that got away? Here's your weekly digest of The Globe's most essential business and investing stories, with insights and analysis from the pros, stock tips, portfolio strategies and more. Air Canada's flight attendants followed through on their threat to walk off the job early Saturday, in a bitter contract dispute between the carrier and its employees that has already led to hundreds of cancelled flights. The airline wound down operations earlier this week in anticipation of the strike. Early Saturday morning, the carrier posted a media release that it suspended all operations of Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge. Air Canada said it will resume service Sunday after Federal Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu ordered binding arbitration to put an end to the strike. However, the union said in a statement it would defy the back-to-work order. 'We remain on strike. We demand a fair, negotiated contract and to be compensated for all hours worked,' the statement read. The complete shutdown of Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge operations is estimated to affect about 130,000 passengers' travel plans daily. Mariya Postelnyak spoke to travellers who are watching their plans unravel. On Tuesday, China announced 75.8-per-cent duties on Canadian canola seed. Beijing unveiled the preliminary duty toward the end of a one-year anti-dumping probe, which began after Canada imposed high tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles. China's Ministry of Commerce argues that Canada's canola sector has benefited from extensive government subsidies and preferential policies that distort markets. Many in Canada's canola industry, however, say China's action is instead a political response to Canadian tariffs in other sectors. Ottawa – which is now facing a growing trade war on two fronts, with both the U.S. and China – has said it will hold off on making concessions until it knows Beijing will respond in kind. But, as Kate Helmore reports, politicians and industry representatives in Western Canada, the heart of the country's canola industry, said a forceful response is needed to resolve the trade dispute and provide financial aid to the industry. Beijing's announcement caused prices to drop $1 per bushel in Canada's $44-billion industry just weeks before harvest. This will cost the 40,000 canola farmers across the country tens of thousands of dollars each. Producers in the U.S. raised their prices at the fastest pace in three years as companies grapple with new costs from President Donald Trump's tariffs. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the producer price index, or PPI, rose 0.9 per cent in July from the month before, more than three times faster than expected, and the largest monthly increase since March, 2022. Wholesale inflation is in a sign that import taxes are pushing up prices for domestic producers, and economists warn higher consumer prices could be next. The PPI came in hotter than the consumer price index numbers released by the labour department earlier this week. Jason Kirby takes a closer look at the latest data in this week's Decoder series. U.S. drugmaker Eli Lilly & Co. has increased prices of its popular diabetes and anti-obesity drug Mounjaro in Canada, responding to pressure from the Trump administration to lower prices in the United States and raise them elsewhere. The company also announced it is sharply raising prices in Britain to match those in other European markets. Chris Hannay reports that the moves make the company one of the most high-profile so far to respond to Mr. Trump's direction to rebalance global drug prices. Two weeks ago, he sent letters to 17 drug companies – including Lilly – telling them to increase prices in non-U.S. markets to make up for lower revenue in the U.S. The administration has also launched a national-security investigation of the sector that could lead to tariffs, which Mr. Trump has mused could be as high as 200 per cent. Zahra Khozema recently asked ChatGPT to predict her retirement. The personal finance writer, who often talks to Gen Zs and millennials about money habits, found herself worrying about whether her retirement plans were realistic after she was laid off. She writes that she found herself comparing herself to others, and wanted the chatbot to help calm her financial anxiety. It worked: 'ChatGPT created a starting point. It was like holding up a mirror and being told, gently, that maybe I'm not failing,' she writes in a recent feature. More Canadians are turning to artificial intelligence for financial advice – from setting household budgets to boosting their financial literacy – but how reliable are the answers? We posed some common personal finance questions to ChatGPT, then asked human personal finance experts to weigh in. Here's what we found. Get the rest of the questions from the weekly business and investing news quiz here, and prepare for the week ahead with The Globe's investing calendar.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Mulcair: Government ‘created an unbelievable mess' with Air Canada return to work order
Watch CTV News political commentator Tom Mulcair says the Carney government's back to work order is 'one of the worst messes' they've made since being elected.