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Denmark to ban phones in schools
Denmark to ban phones in schools

BBC News

time26-02-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Denmark to ban phones in schools

Denmark is set to ban smartphones in schools and after-school clubs. The education minister announced the move on Tuesday following recommendations from a group formed by the government to look at children's wellbeing. Although many schools in the UK have rules banning smartphones, they are not banned by England, Wales and Northern Ireland all have guidance for schools about phone use. Full details have not been released by the Danish government, but Mattias Tesfaye, Minister for Children and Education says a ban would mean "mobile phones and personal tablets will not be allowed at school, neither during break times nor during lessons".The plan follows recommendations from a youth wellbeing commission, which also recommended restricting the use of smartphones to those aged 13 and older."As soon as a phone enters a child's bedroom, it takes up all the space," Rasmus Meyer, president of the commission said. "It risks destroying their self-esteem. As soon as they have a gadget in their hands, their wellbeing suffers." In the last few years, there has been more focus on the potential harms to wellbeing from smartphone use. Research from the University of Birmingham earlier this month found that students who use their phones more often may see negative effects on their wellbeing and the research looked at schools which banned phones and schools that didn't and concluded that banning phones in school doesn't make much of a difference to pupils' grades or how they feel.

Denmark to ban mobile phones in schools and after-school clubs
Denmark to ban mobile phones in schools and after-school clubs

The Guardian

time25-02-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Denmark to ban mobile phones in schools and after-school clubs

Denmark is to ban mobile phones in schools and after-school clubs on the recommendation of a government commission that also found that children under 13 should not have their own smartphone or tablet. The government said it would change existing legislation to force all folkeskole – comprehensive primary and lower secondary schools – to become phone-free, meaning that almost all children aged between seven and 16-17 will be required by law not to bring their phones into school. The announcement marks a U-turn by the government, which had previously refused to introduce such a law. It comes as governments across Europe are trying to impose tighter regulations on children's access to phones and social media. The Danish wellbeing commission was set up by the prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, in 2023 to investigate growing dissatisfaction among children and young people. Its long-awaited report, published on Tuesday, raised the alarm over the digitisation of children and young people's lives and called for a better balance between digital and analogue life. Among its 35 recommendations was the need for government legislation banning phones from schools and after-school clubs. The minister for children and education, Mattias Tesfaye, told Politiken: 'There is a need to reclaim the school as an educational space, where there is room for reflection and where it is not an extension of the teenage bedroom.' There will be scope for local authorities to make exceptions, including for children with special educational needs, but he said mobile phones and personal tablets 'do not belong in school, neither during breaks nor during lessons'. He said the government had started preparing a legislative amendment. 'Suddenly, screens were everywhere in school, and it was only afterwards that we started discussing the consequences,' he said. 'Both academic studies and commissions are starting to address the negative consequences. In the two years that I have been minister of education alone, we have become somewhat wiser.' The commission's research found that 94% of young people had a social media profile before they turned 13 – despite that being the minimum age for many social media platforms – and that nine to 14-year-olds spent an average of three hours a day on TikTok and YouTube. The commission said: 'This increases the risk of children being exposed to, amongst other things, inappropriate comparison cultures, pressure to be available and harmful content and features. 'At the same time it takes time and attention away from essential things in childhood and youth like leisure activities, physically spending time with friends and family, play and immersion in reading and other activities.' Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion Tech giants, it said, should be forced to protect children from 'addictive' design and inappropriate content. Parents, meanwhile, should not give children a smartphone or tablet until they are at least 13. The chair of the commission, Rasmus Meyer, compared the mobile phone ban to not allowing smoking in schools and said that the moment a child is given a smartphone 'it will colonise the child's entire life'. A French report last year also found that children should not be allowed to use smartphones until they are 13. France, which banned primary and secondary pupils from using their phones on school premises in 2018, has been trialling a 'digital pause' for children up to the age of 15, where they hand their phones in on arrival. Norway recently announced a strict minimum age limit of 15 on social media to protect children from tech companies which it said are 'pitted against small children's brains'.

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