logo
Two Edinburgh schools to pilot phone-free policy using lockable pouches

Two Edinburgh schools to pilot phone-free policy using lockable pouches

STV News07-05-2025

Two schools in Edinburgh are piloting a phone-free policy in what is said to be a Scottish first in an effort to improve focus and mental health among pupils.
Portobello High School and Queensferry High School in Edinburgh will introduce magnetic, lockable pouches for the devices in an attempt to curb distractions in class.
It is also hoped the pouches, created by US company Yondr, will improve pupils' moods, encourage less screentime, and increase face-to-face interaction.
Portobello will roll out the pouches across the campus on Wednesday, with Queensferry due to follow suit on Wednesday 14.
The magnetically-locked pouches with phones inside will remain in each pupil's possession, meaning they need not worry about losing their devices or leaving them in the hands of school staff.
All pupils from S1-S6 will be required to participate, and can access their devices back at the end of the school day by tapping the phone on one of the unlocking bases in the school.
It comes after an extensive consultation period with parents and carers, with focus groups meeting to discuss the policy.
Research found that 86% of parents and carers at Portobello supported the introduction of the new policy.
Councillor Joan Griffiths, convener for education, children and families at Edinburgh City Council, said: 'I'm pleased to see Edinburgh schools leading the way in introducing a mobile-phone free school environment.
'Mobile phones in classroom settings are increasingly competing with the teachers for learners' attention and limiting access to mobile phones during the school day is only a positive thing for our young people.
'I know that schools across Edinburgh, and indeed the country, are exploring ways to manage mobile phone use, including restricting phone use during the school day.
'The new pouches provide an innovative way for our young people to have distance from their devices while having the reassurance that they are still in their possession. We hope that this new policy will increase focus on learning, reduce classroom distractions and help improve wellbeing.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Almost half of over 50s are experiencing loneliness
Almost half of over 50s are experiencing loneliness

Scotsman

time3 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Almost half of over 50s are experiencing loneliness

Almost half of over 50s in Scotland experience loneliness some or all of the time, according to new research by Age Scotland. Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The survey also highlights crippling loneliness among carers, with 41% saying they felt lonely some or all of the time. To mark Loneliness Awareness Week, the Scottish charity for older people has published On Every Street - a report which shows the extent of loneliness among older people, with figures revealing that there is at least one chronically lonely older person living on every street in the country. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Anne, 60, from Glasgow was a carer for her mum and mother-in-law over the last 10 years. Anne, 60, experienced acute loneliness as an unpaid carer to her Mum 'Being a dementia carer was very isolating. I gave up my career in financial services to be a full-time carer for my mum and moved into her house. 'It's been a very lonely journey no matter who is around you physically and my husband and I feel very broken emotionally and physically.' Alex, 71, from Motherwell, also features in the report. He said: 'I've lived on my own since I came back to Scotland. I don't have any family or friends around now. The reality is that so many people fall away from your life as you get older. And before you know it, you're on your own. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'I put the TV on in the corner, but it's really just to stop the silence.' Alex, 71, says his Friendship Call from Age Scotland helps him feel less lonely The charity believes that if Scotland is to meet the needs of an ageing population, more investment is needed to tackle loneliness levels otherwise the health of the nation could be severely impacted. Katherine Crawford, chief executive at Age Scotland, said: 'Scotland is in the grip of an epidemic of loneliness with chronic levels of loneliness not going anywhere. 'It is heartbreaking to think that the equivalent of one older person on every street in Scotland feels lonely all or most of the time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Our new report On Every Street lays bare the stories and people behind this shocking statistic and hears their deeply personal experiences of feeling locked out and lonely. 'Our helpline hears from people who have become lonely because they are trying to manage several contributing factors like, caring responsibilities, the rise in the cost of living or a disability. Loneliness can have a huge impact on someone's health, increasing the risk of heart disease, stroke and dementia, as well as contributing to significant mental health challenges. 'We are calling for the Scottish Government, local authorities, funders, politicians, and other partners to ramp up action and commit to renewed investment to support community groups with the resources and support they need to keep communities connected – without them the country faces a worse crisis of social isolation.'

Poem found in a box of junk written by 'titantic' Scots literary figure
Poem found in a box of junk written by 'titantic' Scots literary figure

Scotsman

time5 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Poem found in a box of junk written by 'titantic' Scots literary figure

Sign up to our History and Heritage newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A forgotten manuscript written by a 'titanic figure' of the Scottish Enlightenment has been discovered in an old box of junk during a house clearance. The document was written by Edinburgh poet Allan Ramsay in 1719, with the manuscript , a mix of letter and verse, previously unknown. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The poem, called Address to the Town-Council of Edinburgh, sets out Ramsay's plea to Edinburgh City Council to act to prevent the pirating of his works. The verse was later published by Ramsay, but it is now believed that the newly- discovered document may have been part of the original sent to the city council as the poet sought protection for his song and verse, which were becoming popular at the time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is addressed to the Right Honourable William Neilson Esquire, Lord Provost, and others. Tommy Alexander, a valuer at Great Western Auctions, where the manuscripts will be sold next week, spent months researching the poem after contacting Scottish universities and literary organisations. He said: 'Prior to now, no manuscript copy of Allan Ramsay's Address to the Town-Council of Edinburgh was known to exist. 'This significant literary historical discovery sheds new light on his compositional process, as in the seventh line of the poem we can see Ramsay revising his original word choice, which is unrecorded to now. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Ramsay penned the address as an appeal to the City Council, that they legislate against the pirating of his works. 'This they duly did, decreeing that vendors of Ramsay's verse were to retain only one third of their profits, with the majority share payable to Ramsay.' Were this to be flouted, the vendor was liable to be fined 20 pounds, have their stock confiscated and their licence for future trade revoked. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mr Alexander added: 'Of interest here is the format in which Ramsay presents his poem, that of a letter literally addressed to named members of the Council. It may be the case that it was the receipt of this very document that prompted their intervention.' Mr Alexander described Ramsay, who is regarded as a major influence on Robert Burns, as a 'titanic' figure in the early Scottish Enlightenment. 'As a poet and playwright, as well as a collector of verse, he did much to crystallize the Scottish literary tradition. His influence can be strongly felt through the work of subsequent writers, among them Burns, Fergusson and Scott,' he added. The manuscript, which was found in a box of 'miscelleaneous ephemera', runs to only the fourteenth line of the poem - "In Rags wi' bluther'd Face". Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We assume therefore that this is the first of numerous pages, with the remainder lost,' Mr Alexander added. The manuscript is expected to fetch between £800 and £1,200 when it comes up for auction at the GWA Summer Fine Art & Antiques Action on Friday and Saturday. Other lots at the sale include the painting Crucifixion by renowned Australian artist Roy De Maistre, who has been described as Francis Bacon's 'most important artistic contact in the 1930s'. The painting, which once hung in Iona Abbey, is expected to fetch between £10,000 and £15,000. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is believed the painting was bought directly by The Iona Community from the artist.

Honouring a little piece of Scotland in a not so foreign field
Honouring a little piece of Scotland in a not so foreign field

Scotsman

timea day ago

  • Scotsman

Honouring a little piece of Scotland in a not so foreign field

Contalmaison Cairn, France, honouring the 16th Royal Scots, McCrae's Battalion who died on July 1, 1916 Last week I bumped into Jack Alexander. Jack is the author of an extremely informative book about the First World War's McCrae's Battalion and is vice-chairman of the McCrae's Battalion Trust. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... He told me that he was in the throes of organising this year's visit to the commerative cairn in Contalmaison, France, which is undertaken every year and which, once again, is fully booked. He wrote yesterday to inform me that 'this year the first of July falls on a Tuesday and on that date, the tiny village of Contalmaison will be welcoming a host of bleary-eyed visitors from Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia and Germany. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The focus of everyone's attention is a humble cairn, built from Elgin Sandstone by Scottish craftsmen and adorned with four handsome bronze plaques, designed in Edinburgh, sculpted in Kirkwall and cast in a foundry in Nairn. 'The cairn stands on a platform of Caithness slate, imported from Scotland just over 20 years ago with the rest of the materials. Truly a little piece of Scotland in a not so foreign field.' I was lucky to represent the city at the unveiling of the Cairn in 2004, which was attended by a crowd of over 1000 people, all to see the memorial to the 16th Royal Scots, first proposed in 1919 and finally completed more than 80 years later. Jack said that 'The 16th Royal Scots was McCrae's Battalion and was raised from volunteers in 1914 during the opening months of the Great War. Players and supporters from Hearts and Hibs joined the ranks, along with others from Raith Rovers, Falkirk and Dunfermline. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'McCrae's was the original 'Football Battalion' and was tragically destroyed in less than an hour on the opening day of the Battle of the Somme. 'In spite of dreadful losses McCrae's penetrated further into the German trenches than any other unit, reaching the outskirts of Contalmaison before they were pushed back.' Since the unveiling of the cairn in 2004 the McCrae's Battalion Trust, based in Edinburgh, sends a full coach of 'pilgrims' out to France to the ceremony, which is held in the village every year on 1 July to remember those who fell. Jack reminded me that an agreement between Edinburgh and Contalmaison was forged 'which cemented the friendship of a city of 500,000 with a village of 100 souls. The people of Contalmaison are unfazed by that and care for the Cairn as if it commemorates their own sons.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I have always been impressed by the commitment and passion demonstrated by the McCrae's Battalion when managing these events, particularly when it comes down to 'engaging with the locals.' Jack writes on the Trust's website that 'The Battle of the Somme has become synonymous with slaughter. On the opening morning alone nearly 20,000 British and Commonwealth soldiers gave their lives. A further 40,000 were wounded. The first of July 1916 is often referred to as the blackest day in the history of the British Army.' The service lives long in the memory and a more moving ceremony I have yet to witness. Standing alongside supporters from other football clubs and villagers from the picturesque village of Contalmaison, as the sound of the piper's lament was carried by the breeze across the fields of France, was a truly emotional experience.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store