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New bill would ban use of cellphones in North Carolina schools
New bill would ban use of cellphones in North Carolina schools

Axios

time07-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Axios

New bill would ban use of cellphones in North Carolina schools

A new bill filed this week in the N.C. General Assembly, with some bi-partisan support, would ban the use of cellphones in public schools during instructional time. Why it matters: A growing number of states have moved to ban cellphones and other smart devices in classrooms, as part of an effort to reduce distractions during learning time and boost socialization among students. Driving the news: Senate Bill 55 would ask public school districts to create policies to ban students from using wireless communication devices during class time. The ban would apply to cellphones, tablet computers, laptops, pagers, radios, gaming devices or any device that can provide voice, messaging or other data communication. Devices would be allowed if authorized by a teacher for educational purposes. Between the lines: The bill has three primary Republican sponsors in Sens. Michael Lee (New Hanover County), Jim Burgin (Harnett) and Lisa Barnes (Nash), but there is some bipartisan support. State Sen. Jay Chaudhuri, a Democrat representing Wake County, introduced a similar bill last year with Burgin and applauded the new effort, saying "Study after study, superintendent after superintendent have told us that phone-free schools benefit students, teachers, and parents." State of play: 68% of U.S. adults support cellphone bans during class, and about 36% favor an all-day ban, a Pew Research survey found last year. A group of parents in Wake County schools pushed last year for a district-wide ban in the state's largest school district. But so far, Wake County lets each school set its own policy on phones. The other side: Those who oppose the bans, especially parents of K-12 students, argue that parents should be able to reach their children when needed, Axios' April Rubin previously reported. Many parents see cellphones as critical for safety and connectedness, especially in the face of emergencies like school shootings. Zoom in: While new North Carolina Superintendent Mo Green said on the campaign trail that "we've got to figure out ways to limit the access of cellphones in schools," he hasn't supported an outright ban publically, NC Newsline reported. Zoom out: Health experts and policymakers have called for stricter regulations on youth social media use, while social media companies have been reckoning with accountability about their platforms' harmful effects on children. Research has found that excessive cellphone use can impact children's mental health.

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