France to ban students from keeping smartphones in schools (www.engadget.com)
from RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works to technology@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 14:32
https://sh.itjust.works/post/35877740

#technology

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Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 14:43 next collapse

Good on you France!

I hope more countries start realizing how important this is. We have more than enough evidence demonstrating the damage that comes from being permanently connected, or even online for more than a couple hours per day, and minors are taking the worst of it because they are developing under those conditions.

wjrii@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 15:06 next collapse

I mean… fine? France always does things kind of top-down and there’s certainly no reason you have to have your phone readily available, and plenty of evidence it’s good to be away from it.

It’s not like they need to get to their phones to tell their parents there’s an active shooter on campus. 😐

[deleted] on 10 Apr 15:14 collapse

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Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 15:16 collapse

Tragedy in a French school:

“Maman! Maman! Ze school is out of baguette and fromage! Please come pick me up! I am about to le faint!”

Disgusting.

Carvex@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 15:25 next collapse

“The video footage of the Ulvade TX shooting has been edited to remove the children’s screams.”

I think the French will be fine, lucky fuckers.

[deleted] on 10 Apr 15:38 collapse

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cyborganism@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 19:03 collapse

I think what they’re implying is that this kind of thing doesn’t really happen in France. At least not at the rate it’s happening in the U.S. So they don’t really need to worry about not having cell phones.

To an extent it’s the same with Canada. We’re pretty lucky school shootings aren’t a common occurrence. What’s the worst that can happen here? The school runs out of maple syrup? (Of course I’m joking!)

MegaUltraChicken@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 19:09 next collapse

We’re pretty lucky

Luck has nothing to do with it. We’ve actively decided to allow this shit to happen. The USA isn’t unlucky, we just fucking suck.

cyborganism@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 22:42 collapse

Yeah, you’re right. The whole system in the U.S. seems to be set up to enable these kinds of events.

[deleted] on 10 Apr 19:12 collapse

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[deleted] on 10 Apr 22:41 collapse

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[deleted] on 10 Apr 22:43 collapse

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cyborganism@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 18:56 next collapse

Uh… I’m actually French Canadian. My comment was meant as a joke.

Edit: I really didn’t mean to hurt anyone’s feelings. And if that happened, I apologize.

[deleted] on 10 Apr 19:03 collapse

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cyborganism@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 22:44 collapse

Don’t gaslight me. My comment was a joke and you reported it just to fuck with me. You’re just harassing me at this point. Stop.

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:31 collapse

Lmao is that the comment that got removed?

AFC1886VCC@reddthat.com on 10 Apr 15:19 next collapse

I’m still not convinced that this is the answer to helping kids concentrate & learn more in school.

Akrenion@slrpnk.net on 10 Apr 15:28 next collapse

I think it is fine but we also need lessons to properly interact with the technology. Scams, fraud, disinformation and checking sources were handled very abstractly at best and archaic at worst.

Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Apr 17:29 collapse

Gen alpha is significantly worse than prior generations on tech. Them having their phones on them doesn’t teach them, they consume on the lowest level. They don’t learn the actual Internet skills prior generations had to to survive.

wjrii@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 15:37 next collapse

I do sometimes think there is a bit of hand-wringing that happens where people glom onto the most visible sign of changing times and blame it for things that probably aren’t as different as the adults think, but by the same token most schools in richer countries have screens everywhere with school-related interconnectivity and even tools that are not unlike social media.

I see very little downside here, even if it may not result in some magic rebirth of older forms of social interaction. It seems like the major benefit from the French pilot programs was “improved atmosphere,” in which case it’s still better than nothing. Having a period when kids are learning to deal with small-group dynamics is not a bad thing, and neither is taking “dealing with phone bullshit” off the teachers’ plates.

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 17:01 next collapse

there is no “the” answer but it can be part of an answer.

Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Apr 17:28 collapse

It is. Phones are the #1 distractor in school

randon31415@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 18:18 next collapse

Dude, it’s been 2 centuries, take a hint

Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Apr 20:29 collapse

This is not about socialization lmfao. different topic.

AFC1886VCC@reddthat.com on 10 Apr 18:31 collapse

Boring lessons are pretty big distractors. I seen kids fall asleep and daydream long before smartphones were even a thing. Make learning fun and the kids will engage. Confiscating their possessions is a hostile move that never goes down well.

Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Apr 18:54 next collapse

It’s necessary. Phones are far worse than prior to phones, and I’ve seen both sides of it.

Boring lessons is a fact of life. People need to realize that not all education can be interesting. Sometimes you gotta suck it up, sit down, and learn. And I say this as someone with crippling adhd

Lfrith@lemmy.ca on 11 Apr 01:00 next collapse

My classrooms banned phones so I played games on my graphing calculator or did the old fashioned drawing.

higgsboson@dubvee.org on 11 Apr 16:30 collapse

Smart. Anything to avoid learning!

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 07:47 next collapse

day-dreaming isn’t intrinsically bad. People do need time to think about stuff, and have their mind drift from topic to topic. Some modern teaching practices advocate deliberate “brain breaks” for students.

The issue with phones isn’t so much that students are sometimes off task, but rather that the phone consumes their attention entirely. It uses up the students’ useful concentration as well as their ‘rest’ time.

explodicle@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 12:30 collapse

It’s not enough that they need to work all year and deal with angry parents over every F. Now they need to be infotainment competing for attention with anything a kid can find on their cell phone.

vane@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 15:29 next collapse

So schools would suddenly become rehab treatment centers ? What a freaking timeline.

flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz on 10 Apr 15:31 next collapse

Good. Boredom is the key to learning. Well it should be interesting on it’s own, but take what you got.

Of course the manner of learning in most schools is not ideal, kids find it boring for a reason, but without distraction they might latch onto some bits of information just to survive the class.

Harvey656@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 20:45 next collapse

This mentality is why I almost failed higbschool. Boredom fails us who need to be constantly invested.

desertdruid@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 12 Apr 00:02 collapse

Yeah, different education methods should be used for different learning capabilities. I’m thankful my teachers in elementary school quickly learned that as long as you kept me busy with new info or math problems I would be happy.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 07:01 next collapse

Maybe if school wasn’t 95% time filing garbage and busywork. I’d take a crashcourse video over what they served in school any day and hour of the week.

CrazyLikeGollum@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 10:39 collapse

Boredom is the key to learning something it’s just very likely that it won’t be the thing school is trying to teach. Especially if the thing school is teaching is the thing boring you.

capuccino@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 18:56 next collapse

le tiktok

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 20:39 next collapse

Good, you don’t need smart phones in school

For anyone screeching that you do: No. You don’t.

We’ve been without smart phones for millenia, literally, and we were fine without. You will be fine without.

LaggyKar@programming.dev on 10 Apr 21:46 next collapse

We’ve been without a lot of things for millennia

Dil@is.hardlywork.ing on 10 Apr 23:40 next collapse

we didnt have clean drinking water either, or daily showers, we lived without soap for millenia

Olap@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 06:30 collapse

Lol, we definitely have had clean drinking water for far longer than we have had dirty drinking water, thank the industrial revolution for that. And try skipping a shower for a day - you’ll be fine. Soap also has a long history www.soaphistory.net/soap-history/ over 4000 years

So literally wrong on all three points. Perhaps you need to read more instead of doom scrolling and swapping nudes on your smartphone

aeshna_cyanea@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 07:04 next collapse

I’m pretty sure there can be other bad stuff in water that existed before the industrial revolution

Olap@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 07:14 collapse

Sure, loads of sewage. But it also had smaller settlements, less people, and human waste was recycled more in times gone by too. Far more water was far more drinkable even 150 years ago

Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Apr 12:03 collapse

You have died of dysentery.

Dil@is.hardlywork.ing on 11 Apr 12:16 next collapse

“So literally wrong on all three points. Perhaps you need to read more instead of doom scrolling and swapping nudes on your smartphone” This made me feel like I was on reddit not lemmy lmao

Olap@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 12:58 collapse

Old habits die hard. But the most teenager comment I have seen on lemmy needed a rebuttal

unconfirmedsourcesDOTgov@lemmy.sdf.org on 11 Apr 14:27 collapse

Motherfucker how long do you think humans have been around for? Okay, sure, soap has been around for like 6k years, wow, such a long time. Modern humans have been fumbling around figuring shit out like an untrained ai model for the last 60k-160k years. Quick math shows us that for somewhere between 54k and 154k years of our history as a species, no soap. MILLENIA!

Drinking water: you’re making a distinction between clean, as in unpolluted by chemicals and other substances, and cleaned drinking water, which has been processed by humans to make it fit to drink with a lower risk of causing illness. Clean water has obviously been around for eons, but cleaned water, as I believe OP was describing, is a much more modern concept.

Showers: “try skipping a shower for a day”? Motherfucking neckbeard no, shower every fucking day. Try it, people might find you somewhat less repulsive until you open your mouth.

Olap@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 07:22 collapse

To get back on topic: I bet you pull your phone out at the urinal

Dil@is.hardlywork.ing on 10 Apr 23:41 next collapse

People werent fine either, why dont you just google 911 calls from kids and see how many would have been better off without phones

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 06:56 next collapse

For me school was a great way to learn almost nothing of any use while occupying 11 years of my life with pointless time filing busywork that I hated every hour, minute and each and every eternal second of of. The only thing worse than school has been work and my consolation is that at least it’s not forever!

LarmyOfLone@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 09:24 next collapse

You wish you would have been home schooled?

To be honest I’m disappointed we haven’t seen more progress into “VR schools” yet. Where you are fully submerged into a learning experience. While your blood is constantly analyzed and drugs to increase concentration and energy levels are dispensed. Ok maybe not the last part.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 09:44 collapse

I wish it didn’t waste most of my youth

LarmyOfLone@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 10:24 collapse

Well who doesn’t once they get older haha. But I seriously wish I wouldn’t have had a laptop or smartphone with keyboard and typed everything I learned as a question / answer flashcard. So I can review them. Some kind of flow inducing learning environment. Of course everyone learns differently, but I imagine there are huge gains possible with software and learning courses with current technology.

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:28 collapse

And yet here you are writing English.

You take what you’ve been given for granted.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 21:41 collapse

That doesn’t take even 1% of 11 years

Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf on 12 Apr 13:51 collapse

No, but everything else combined does. You wouldn’t even be able to perform basic multiplication tasks without school, let alone solve more complex problems. School teaches you the basics for higher education, be it Uni or vocational school.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 13 Apr 00:14 collapse

The large bulk of it was not. A drip feed to fill the weeks months years

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 11:10 next collapse

Yeah who needs the wheel either? We survived 450,000 years without it. And don’t get me started on paper. Paper can be used to make paper airplanes or spitballs. What a distraction! Kids should chisel their assignments onto stone slates like our ancestors did.

musubibreakfast@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 11:16 next collapse

No, you’re being facetious. Go sit in the corner.

explodicle@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 12:23 next collapse

I understand the paper, but why do they need wheels? Why are you leaving out guns?

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 12:40 collapse

why do they need wheels?

Carts, busses. There’s wheels in lots of stuff.

Why are you leaving out guns?

Well, you see, unlike the wheel/paper/mini computers with built in calculators calendars document editors email and research tools, guns serve no legitimate purpose in a school.

explodicle@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 13:31 collapse

Do they not have full sized computers? It’s dubious that there is any legitimate educational value to smartphones in schools either.

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 14:35 collapse

School exists to teach you how to function in society. In our society, like it or not, everyone has a cell phone. Let’s focus on teaching them to integrate this tool into their lives in a productive way.

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:27 collapse

If wheels could brainwash a kid, completely distract them, and make them throw a tantrum when you take it away then we might have to worry about them.

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 14:36 next collapse

Literally anything can distract kids and make them throw a tantrum when you take it away. Have you ever met a child?

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:48 collapse

You’re being purposely obtuse.

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 14:52 collapse

Yeah you’re right. Young children are renowned for their vast attention spans, or at least they used to be before cell phones were invented. Nobody ever passed notes, made paper airplanes, graffitied on their desks, or drew pictures in class prior to 2006.

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:54 collapse

I’m a grown ass man and I can barely get off the phone. The kids don’t stand a chance brother.

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 15:41 collapse

Perhaps you should get checked for adhd

Verat@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 22:06 collapse

Except they can, remember fidget spinners?

BlackArtist@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 18:01 next collapse

Type 1 diabetics would like a word.

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 18:21 next collapse

I wanna preface this with I had a small keyboard slide phone in school, not a smart phone by today’s standards, but I am firmly against this archaic mentality.

It doesn’t address the elephant in the room, classrooms have become painstakingly boring. There is no real incentive for the student to actually do well anymore, or even pay attention. This is exclusively for the k-12 system though, as the issues seem to have become non-existent entering the college and university system. I went from being a solid D/C student in high-school to being an A/B+ student going into college

I spent my time in grade school fucking around and barely paying attention, this was without a smart phone. I couldn’t keep focused on the class subjects, and so therefore I gave up. The college system has the process down-packed, it’s laid back, not hours on end in a row learning useless shit you won’t need, and you have the freedom to either listen or don’t, there isn’t the constant pressure from professors “You are failing you need to do better” like in high school. Plus the professors seem actually happy to be there and they make the content more enjoyable, its not just droning on and on on a subject.

The only things removing a phone from a classroom is going to do is remove a potential learning tool, and just annoying your students even further. If your student doesn’t want to learn, removing items isn’t magically going to make the kid learn. Make it entertaining, do something OTHER than this stupid info cram shit where you just regurgitate information constantly. There is zero incentive on almost every subject you learn to actually want to learn it. You don’t learn any type of life skills, you don’t learn anything for your career/future. Hell they don’t even teach cursive anymore. My sister couldn’t even read a physical clock entering 7th grade. They don’t teach it. But you can bet things like “what happens in the 16th century” will be taught, or what basic cell structure is (I couldn’t tell you, I forgot all that info leaving that class room).

Like I get needing to know history, and basic mathematics, but the current schooling system is a overburdened plug of useless information for society. Everyone knows it, everyone lies to their kid saying things like “yea you will definitely need to know what beware the ides of march means in life”. If things were taught that people knew would be useful in life (or at the very least explained HOW it would be), and it wasn’t just a professor saying “ok class open your book, this is the lesson” for 3/4 of the year, you might have a better student attention span.

Miaou@jlai.lu on 12 Apr 10:43 collapse

We oughtta send the kids to the mines again, god forbid they might discover something they never knew they’d like studying at school.

TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works on 12 Apr 14:58 collapse

For anyone screeching that you do: No. You don’t

I have a feeling that you haven’t gone to school recently lol

Educational resources are blocked that you literally cannot do your assignments without accessing. Teachers will tell you to use your phone to access it.

If you have some questions for someone who is actively in highschool right now, I’d be happy to answer :)

edit: tone

Dil@is.hardlywork.ing on 10 Apr 23:40 next collapse

Easier to kidnap

childOfMagenta@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 07:36 collapse

Because famously, kidnappers give you that one phone call opportunity…

desktop_user@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 11 Apr 18:56 collapse

famously both android and ios have (default to iirc?) a “feature” which dials the emergency number by repeatedly pressing the power button.

MetalMachine@feddit.nl on 10 Apr 23:56 next collapse

That’s ass. Just don’t allow use during class.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 01:27 next collapse

Does anybody but me remember when schools banned walkmen? What about portable CD players? Gameboy? This happens everytime a new technology becomes popular and schools don’t know how to regulate it they do this.

The downside is, a fair few student will have their phones confiscated by the school. But it won’t dissuade them from bringing them in. You make them better at hiding them instead of creating tools and protocols to enforce for when they can and can’t use them.

The crazy thing is, this should be about schools not wanting to be liable for or responsible for these pieces of tech. But Everytime I see legislation like this, it’s to do with “children’s mental health”, or these devices being a distraction.

Model it. Nobody should be allowed to have a phone in schools by this metric. No phones for students? No phones for teachers and administration.

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 07:43 next collapse

About ‘better at hiding them’; maybe so; but that will largely be down to how the rule is enforced. Some schools basically just say “please don’t carry your phone. Put it in your locker.” In those schools, basically every student has their phone in their pocket. Whereas other schools are more strict about it. The phone can be confiscated on site, and in some cases require the parent to collect it. In those cases, compliance goes way up.

As for ‘no phones for teachers and admin’; unfortunately, some of the jobs and responsibilities of teachers are done using a phone. Teachers are required to carry a phone during yard-duty, for emergency purposes. And teachers often use their phone to mark class attendance rolls. … But its definitely a bad look when a teacher is walking down a school corridor staring at their phone while student phones are banned.

As for the reasons for the ban… well, they are many and varied - including all of the things you mentioned. (liability, mental health vs bullying in particular, and distraction from class activities.)

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 12:02 collapse

Are they going to allocate money to every school to employ technologies to prevent cell phone usage on the premises? Unlikely because, as I said, this law is to prohibit students from having cell phones, not teachers or administration.

So what happens when a school now has to confiscate and hold $1000 phones en masse? It makes them a target for theft. It makes them a target for lawsuit in the event that any of those phones are misplaced, stolen, damaged etc.

Teachers and admins didn’t used to have cell phones in schools either. What are they doing on a phone that they can’t use a landline and a computer for? Why is a cell phone so important for yard duty? Why is it a requirement? What does the cell phone do that a landline can’t do?

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 12:30 next collapse

To avoid any risk of legal liability the school rule becomes “do not bring a mobile phone to school”, similar to the advice that schools give about valuables in general - especially on sport days. Bring at your own risk. This is especially true when it is a government policy - i.e. not the school’s decision.

Note, this article is talking about France. But as has been pointed out, France is not the first country to do this. I live in Australia, and my comments are based on the phone bans here which have been in place here for a few years (I think the state of Victoria was first, and all states have seen one-by-one followed that example because they see it as a good idea.)

The discussion about whether or not teachers should have smart phones is a separate issue. It has a totally different pros and cons, benefits and challenges.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 12:43 collapse

Schools likely already have a policy about bringing valuables items to schools which applies here. They also likely have policies about objects that are distractions in class or not suitable for school environments with protocols in place to enforce and or deal with said objects. So tell me. Why is this different? I know the article is talking about France.

So, explain to me why this law is necessary? What does it achieve? What does it do that wasn’t already being implemented?

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 12:54 collapse

The primary purpose of making it a government policy is to defuse the endless arguments and pushback that schools were fighting to stop students using phones.

If the rule is a case-by-case thing implemented by individual classroom teachers, it doesn’t work at all - because students will quickly see and exploit differences in how the rule is enforced by different teachers. It means the phones still get used, and any attempt to remove that distraction becomes a massive battle of “why are you targeting me. That other student is allowed to use theirs. The other teachers don’t mind.” etc etc.

Having a clear school-wide policy mostly fixes that; but it still gets a very similar effect from the parents. “I give my child permission, because they need it for such-and-such reason”. It can be dealt with, but it is genuinely a large burden on the school. But having a clear government policy removes that battle for the school. The answer is always clear “it’s a government policy, it is not our decision to make”. (By the way, there are still some exemptions for medial reasons; but again, there are no case-by-case arguments, because the policy is the same for all schools.)

So in short its about consistency; to reduce conflict between teachers and students, and between schools and parents.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:47 collapse

Flip that argument around for me and tell me what that argument is. Because what it seems like it boils down to is a version of favoritism which will still exist and be taken advantage of under the law. What does this law fix exactly? How does this law prevent favoritism?

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 23:24 collapse

I don’t know what you mean by favouritism. The reasoning for the phone ban goes something like this:

  1. Teachers and education researchers have agreed that children are less productive in school due to mobile phones.
  2. But preventing children from using their phones in school creates significant additional workload, due to conflicts and arguments.
  3. Various governments have recognised this, and have created a law which can remove the phones without the workload.

If you’re talking again about the fact that teachers are allowed phones but students are not, then I’m disappointed. I’ve put in quite a bit of good faith effort into talking about this stuff. At the start of our conversation I felt that I was answering genuine questions, and perhaps helping clarify why someone might want a law like this. But now I’m starting to feel like that was entirely wasted, because you never wanted to think about it anyway - you only wanted to fight it. That’s how I’m starting to feel. Maybe I’m wrong, but this ‘how does the law prevent favoritism’ seems like a totally bullshit line to reasoning to me.

Different laws and rules target different groups of people for different reasons. There’s a huge list of rules and responsibilities that apply exclusively to teachers and not other professions. And there’s a heap of rules that apply to children and not adults. There can be different rules for different reasons. As for phone usage, I’d personally be totally fine if all smart phones were phased out for everyone for all purposes across the entire world. But I do think it’s a false equivalence to say that if phones are banned for students they should also be banned for everyone else. It a totally separate argument. And note: I’m not introducing this law. I didn’t ask for it. I didn’t design it. I don’t even live in the country that the article is from. I’m only try to outline what I understand to be the motivation. If you think something negative is going to result from this law, you should try to outline what that is. What-aboutisms are not helpful.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 00:42 collapse

Man. I read the article. You all seem to be taking what I said as “I think students should have cell phones in schools”. In actuality I don’t think there’s any reason for students to have cell phones in schools.

So my argument isn’t that I think the ban is bad. My argument is that this is a piss poor way of going about it that doesn’t really add any benefits (especially when you consider that the law preventing students from using cell phones in schools has been on the books since 2018).

So this is not an argument about what researchers found as far as differences in the mental health of students allowed to have phones (which is a big jump because at best the phones are tolerated in students pockets or bags not allowed to use them in school during lessons), vs those that aren’t. That part of what has been said up and down this comment section is irrelevant. It has nothing at all to do with my original comment.

I don’t care what governments recognize about a correlation between student mental health or well being and cell phone use. That’s not got anything at all to do with what I said.

If you’re disappointed it’s literally because you didn’t read.

Miaou@jlai.lu on 12 Apr 10:38 collapse

Lol yeah criminals are going to raid schools to grab a couple of phones, sure buddy, take your meds now

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 13:17 collapse

Don’t know any delinquent teenagers do you? And don’t even start with the “must be American BS” because I’d be happy to Google some news stories for you.

I can tell you didn’t read either.

rippersnapper@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 08:01 next collapse

Yeah I think the adverse effect of handing an iPhone to a 10 year old in Atlanta, when that teen is still highly impressionable unrestricted and unsupervised access to the internet is far worse than handing a kid a Gameboy on which they can only game, or a Walkman on which the worst thing they can do is listen to Cardi B.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 11:56 collapse

And the fault of the parent who is the only one who can do anything about that child having unrestricted access to the internet of a phone. This is adding to the responsibilities and liabilities of the schools without solving the problem in a meaningful way and this is exactly what I’m being critical of in my statement.

If nobody has a phone you can implement other technologies to alarm if such a device is brought into the property etc. You can actually jam cell phone use in the area too. There’s solutions that would mitigate a school having to take on hundreds of confiscated $1000 phones which would be a huge liability and make them a target.

rippersnapper@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 13:11 collapse

You compared smartphones to previous tech such as Walkmans, and I explained how they’re nowhere near the same in the extreme case (unsupervised access). No school is gonna confiscate the phones as long as the kids listen. And the kids need to learn to listen to parents and teachers. Discipline is sorely missing in the new generation. Look at that series “adolescence “ to see the real effects of giving kids a smartphone.

And jamming is expensive and ineffective (you’ll end up jamming nearby devices not on school property too).

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:45 collapse

I compared it to previous tech because that tech was also considered a distraction and labeled with a similar brush and handled in a similar way to the way phones are likely handled today and it’s important to understand and take into account what schools are likely already doing in order to facilitate learning and prevent such “distractions”. This isn’t about unsupervised access. This was never about unsupervised access. This is about the distraction that phones and other materials play in a child’s ability to learn. And as that it stands to reason that A. Schools already have implemented protocols to deal with this situation when it arises. And B. That this law doesn’t really do much to fix the problem, but does add additional liability because now regardless of whether or not the phone is being a distraction it must be confiscated and then held for a parent to pick up. Meaning that A. It must in essence remain in the same condition it was in when it was confiscated (and it won’t because it would have to be charged at regular intervals and with new phones logged into occasionally to prevent media on the phone from being wiped). So this adds liability for the school. What protections does the school and school administration have under this law?

The effect of giving children smart phones is not going to be in any way mitigated by this law. This is not a ban on cell phones for children under the age of 18 full stop. It’s a ban on children being allowed to bring cell phones to school.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 11:29 next collapse

Does anybody but me remember when schools banned walkmen? What about portable CD players? Gameboy?

Except none of these things were feeding Andrew Tate or Joe Rogan garbage straight into their highly impressionable skulls.

I, for one, support the banning of phones in schools. The social media addiction has been shown to cause depression, particularly in girls, and the brainwashing is ever more apparent.

If anything, this policy fails by not going far enough. I question whether kids should have access to social media at all before a certain age.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 11:52 next collapse

And that is the fault of the parents who chose to hand phones to these kids. It is not the fault of the school, nor is it something the school should have to do anything about. (Edit for clarification: what I meant by “so anything about it” was schools aren’t responsible for teaching good and responsible phone use and self control, nor is it their job to step in when the parent is doing their job with teaching these skills).

I’ll also point out the argument that there was a push back then for outlawing video games and violent music because of its effect on young children and regardless of the validity of the danger to kids, it’s still the fault of parents who were allowing their children to listen to that music or play those games. Schools already likely have policies about cell phones, or at the very least policies about confiscating distractions.

You seem to have taken this as not support for banning phones in schools rather than what it really is. A criticism of this method for the deficiencies that it creates without solving the problem or even (more than likely) changing anything about the protocols already in place for handling distractions in schools except potentially creating a worse situation for the administration who have to now be responsible for these items en masse because students and parents are going to ignore this until it hurts them personally.

It also doesn’t teach students anything at all about moderation or the dangers of the internet, nor does it teach them anything about this tech which they will end up having to use as adults. And if you have seen adults with this tech you know it’s not just a danger to kids.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 13:13 collapse

And that is the fault of the parents who chose to hand phones to these kids. It is not the fault of the school, nor is it something the school should have to do anything about

Okay so, because some parents are bad and fail at educating their kids properly, society shouldn’t take a role in correcting that behaviour and instead should just let kids be damaged for life, did I understand you correctly?

I don’t know where you’re from (although I can guess), but here in Europe, and this is an article about France, we recognise the state has a role to fulfill in society, we all pay taxes and expect them to be used for the benefit of all. I don’t see any problems with schools being the enforcers of government legislation in this instance.

Also, everything else you wrote… I mean, it is obvious that your school system is very different from what I’m familiar with. Because yes, it IS the school’s responsibility to make sure that rules are applied properly in their premises, the money/resources necessary to do so are a secondary thought. This shouldn’t be something that needs to be explained, but well, here we are.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:39 collapse

So, what (in France I know!) are you getting for said taxes that you were not getting before?

Because that’s exactly what I’m getting at. It is the schools responsibility to enforce the rules. The point is, it’s not the schools responsibility to take on the liability of what comes with that (ie. Holding onto thousands of dollars worth of tech with the ability to keep that tech in the same condition it was in when it was confiscated for an untold amount of time), it is the parents responsibility to make sure their children aren’t ringing such distracting material to school. And this means there are already likely protocols in place for distracting material. So what are you getting out of this ban?

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 13:46 collapse

it’s not the schools responsibility to take on the liability of what comes with that (ie. Holding onto thousands of dollars worth of tech with the ability to keep that tech in the same condition it was in when it was confiscated for an untold amount of time),

But it is, actually. Lol. It’s always been. I’ve had my phone taken in class a few times, and it was always returned at the end. It’s really not a big deal.

I don’t know what you mean by “Holding onto thousands of dollars worth of tech”. Its up to the teachers to keep it for the duration of the classes, and to return them at the end. They don’t need a safe to keep them in. It really isn’t that big a deal.

it is the parents responsibility to make sure their children aren’t ringing such distracting material to school.

It should be, but again, they aren’t. Which is why the schools must intervene. And it’s not really something they want to do, it is something they have to do, by government mandate.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:53 collapse

So when one of these phones start a fire because it’s been improperly kept and the battery has a thermal runaway event?

If the phone is always returned then literally the law does nothing. The phone is being given back to the student? That’s a failure in the implementation of protocol or policy. You can’t use that to claim my argument is invalid because it literally does not make sense in this context.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 13:54 collapse

You still haven’t answered what you are getting at here. These rules have to be enforced either way, so I don’t know why you think complaining your way out of it should even be a factor. It isn’t. Schools need to deal with it, simple as.

Or are you just saying “well, I don’t see how this can be enforced so they might as well not do anything!”?

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:12 collapse

This is wasteful. It is short sighted. It does not fix or mitigate the problem and makes the problem worse for a lot of reasons that I can detail if you would like (but I doubt that will matter to you at all because you seem to be misunderstanding everything I’ve said).

This can be enforced. It will be detrimental to the school system as a whole. It is not a fix for any of the problems detailed. It doesn’t change anything as far as I can tell and literally nobody has been able to come up with anything to validate what it would change, how it would change it for the better, or why the current rule structure and protocols in schools would benefit from it in any way.

So I’m saying it’s shortsighted and either needs to be reworked, or criminalizing parents allowing their children to bring such materials into schools should be implemented instead.

They trialed 180 schools, forcing the student to hand over or otherwise stow these devices in a place they couldn’t access for the duration of the school day. And they have “evidence” that it helps with the “child well-being, and focus”.

So now they are making it mandatory for all schools? How? What protocols are they putting in place? I’m really curious. The article says nothing. It’s basically a really poorly worded press release.

Are the schools providing a place to house these devices? That would be a liability.

Are the schools banning the devices in the premises? If so, what are they doing with the ones that are going to be confiscated?

Is this law going to hold the parents accountable in any meaningful way (besides the potential inconvenience of having to pick up the phone at the school in person)? If so, that would be the only potentially beneficial part of a law like this.

What does the school do with such contraband? Can they turn it over to an authority like the police? This could also potentially be a beneficial part of making such policy into law. Depends entirely on how it’s implemented.

Why do people always assume criticism is " we should just do nothing? " What is wrong with looking at something and seeing that it might be flawed and speaking up?

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 14:20 collapse

What are you even talking about at this point? The article is very clear.

There was a trial where schools were asked to get students to leave their phones in their lockers or in a pouch. The results were positive, so now they are expanding it nationwide. I don’t know what is complicated about this.

Is it gonna be flawless? No, and there probably is room for improvements. But it isn’t wasteful or short-sighted as you claim.

You’d do well to know that most schools in France are public and equipped with lockers, so this isn’t that big of an added expense. Sure, it could be bothersome if teachers have to tell students to leave their phones on their lockers, I guess. But that’s about it. Worst case it will be as it was back in my days, where the teacher kept the phones of the rogue students on his table until the end of classes.

They’ll probably never gonna get everyone. But if they can get even 60% of students to leave their phones in their lockers all day, that’s already a net positive for very little added costs, most of which won’t be monetary unless it’s a school with particularly degraded lockers that must be replaced.

I don’t find it necessary to answer the rest of the rambling. Contraband? Criminalising parents? Lol. Kids lie to their parents all the time, they buy phones behind their backs. Holding parents criminally accountable would be insane.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:50 collapse

The article gives little to no detail about the law or what’s changed. It makes claims that this was a pilot program implemented in 180 schools whereby students were required to place cell phones in a pouch or locker they couldn’t access during school hours. It makes claims that this was successful, and therefore a ban will be implemented. It doesn’t say if this ban will use the same protocol (having students place phones in a locked pouch or locker they don’t have access to for the school day). It doesn’t state how this differs at all from previous laws that prohibit students from using mobile phones on school premises which were implemented in 2018.

It doesn’t explain what the “separation of student from phone” looks like, or what the repercussions will be for students found with a phone. It says nothing about protocols to properly store the devices (and what will happen in the event of an emergency where the device is a danger to students or property).

It gives literally no details, and doesn’t even link to the law in question.

A further guardian article I found says it is receiving criticism for some of the problems I have previously detailed (though not all of them). That same article strongly advances the idea that cell phone use is a detriment to children’s health and inference can be made that this is the main reason for such a ban, but this ban does not fundamentally solve this problem in any way.

It doesn’t say they are expanding the implementation used in the trial nation wide. That is an assumption you made that the writer likely also made and didn’t follow-up. This is just a poorly written article full stop.

Your argument is terrible, and poorly defended. You only went and read the article after you started making arguments to me. I read the article before I made my first comment because I had a lot of questions that were not answered and still haven’t been answered. That’s literally because the media is doing a poor job of explaining this situation and the law in question.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 15:02 collapse

Okay, to be quite honest, you’re reading way too deep into a matter that doesn’t even concern you considering you’re not a resident of France, and I’m probably wasting too much of my own time even entertaining your rambling.

So we’ll stop here. I’ll just close with what I know from experience with these kinds of policies, they always come out rough and broad but the details can (and will) be refined as its implementation spreads nationwide and they start covering the pot holes.

And it will spread nationwide, because it wouldn’t make sense in the context of France to have a government-funded program only apply to a small region of France. It’s not a municipal policy and France isn’t composed of individual, sovereign states either.

Again, none of these things should need to be said since that’s pretty much how all new policy launches work. And as usual, the person I’m debating doesn’t even know the basics of how X country operates and apparently don’t know how policy works in general, yet still they believe they can educate me on this matter. So I’m forced to conclude this indeed must be a day ending in -y.

Speaking of day, have a good one!

hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 12:59 next collapse

Rush Limbaugh was broadcast on the free radio, you could listen to it on $1 worth of junk parts if you knew what you were doing. The ease of access is not what made republican bigotry accessible or popular.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 13:37 collapse

Sure, but we’re talking about a way different scale. “If you knew what you were doing” being a key word here.

It’s never been easier to come across this garbage when youtube/Instagram/Tiktok comes installed on most phones by default. What’s worse, there have never been so many grifters spewing the same shit.

Back in the day, you might have been able to call Limbaugh an isolated instance of a clear grifter getting paid to spread lies.

Nowadays, the Tate clones are so ubiquitous that it’s hard to point out the flaws in thinking because so many people seem to believe in them. But its just the algorithm feeding you more of the same, over and over.

hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 16:09 collapse

It was almost the entirety of AM radio for the past 40 years. Sports and this right-wing trash. On in the background at every work place, hardware store, and cafe until Muzac took over. Had that ranting asshole and his friends pumping into our ears wanting it or not. Many areas of the country had only that and Country Music for hours in any direction.

When I said “if you knew what you were doing” I meant you can build an AM receiver out of literal trash with a middle school understanding of electrics but no one bothered because you had one built in to every car, every tape player, boom box, alarm clock, and anything else with a speaker. You had a radio in every room of the house and 2 in the garage even if you never turned it on. There’s no way to believe that phones have less cultural push than AM radio had pre-1990.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 16:45 collapse

There’s no way to believe that phones have less cultural push than AM radio had pre-1990.

I mean, you can believe whatever you want, but the answer is yes there is.

You should watch the series Adolescence, btw. It deals with this exact topic. Its 4 episodes long and it shows how social media and constant connection and more importantly INTERACTION with everyone, has an effect that is fundamentally different from passively listening to AM radio.

hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 17:27 collapse

Sorry, didn’t pay my Netflix cultural tax this year. Maybe I’ll sail the sees for it.

Pirata@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 17:49 collapse

I highly encourage you to. 🏴‍☠️

thoro@lemmy.ml on 12 Apr 04:04 collapse

What’s your point? Are you banning the entire Internet?

All this stuff is still accessible once the bell rings and before they get to school, just like it was when I was a kid. Kids were still going on YouTube/MySpace/ Facebook and more to share things. This argument doesn’t make sense.

You’re attributing the issue of algorithms to the medium itself.

Gibibit@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 06:02 collapse

Facebook and YouTube weren’t as good at recommending things back then. It’s not the internet as a whole that’s the problem, it’s what social media has become. Addiction skinner boxes. It’s not ok for kids to grow up using that.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 11 Apr 12:10 next collapse

I remember when people didn’t have phones on them 24/7 and kids didn’t die and parents could call the school if they needed to talk to the kids. Somehow we survived.

Nalivai@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:58 next collapse

And a bunch of people didn’t but we don’t talk about them, it was the norm back then.

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 11 Apr 15:33 collapse

Teddy sniffing glue, he was twelve years old, fell from the roof on East 2-9, Cathy was eleven when she pulled the plug, twenty six reds and a bottle of wine.

But people don’t like that song, so you’re right about not wanting to talk about it.

deeferg@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 00:36 collapse

Speak for yourself, thats a constant banger at the jams with friends.

SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 19:24 collapse

Well the #1 reason US parents want their kids to have phones is because so many kids die in school shootings and parents have a need to be able to get ahold of their kids.

That’s the #1 reason, no matter how illogical it is

wizblizz@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 14:22 collapse

Not sure why you’re getting downvoted, you’re right. Kids calling 911 is what gets first responders on scene. Until kids in America can attend school without the threat of gun violence, banning phones is not an option.

Miaou@jlai.lu on 12 Apr 10:28 collapse

If they have to hide their phones now, they won’t be using them as much, which is The end goal.

You might be living proof that not using tiktok does not necessarily make you smart, I’ll give you that point.

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 13:21 collapse

They already had to “hide the phones”. Literally France already passed a law stating that phones aren’t allowed in elementary and middle schools for students. Those phones previously had to be kept in a backpack or pocket and weren’t allowed to be used on the premises.

This new law does one singular thing, so far as I can tell (which isn’t made clear in either of the articles I read). It actually actively makes students surrender phones at the beginning of the school day and locks those phones away in a centralized location the students don’t have access to.

The problem with that is what I have been saying in subsequent comments. There are protocols in place for what happens when a student breaks the rules. But A. They mention nothing at all about how they will know a student is carrying around a phone in their pocket or using it in the bathroom. And B. they mention nothing about the repercussions for skirting such rules and regulations.

Additionally, if this is about student mental health (as they claimed), it does absolutely nothing to teach them about the dangers of cell phones, nor does it even remotely teach them to moderate cell phone use.

daggermoon@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 07:10 next collapse

See everyone, It’s not just us Americans! The French are doing stupid things too!

It’s a joke, don’t write in.

iknowitwheniseeit@lemmynsfw.com on 11 Apr 07:13 next collapse

We’ve had a similar ban in the Netherlands for a year or two now. Mobile phones were already not allowed in classes. Kids seem to have survived.

RecipeForHate1@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 07:28 next collapse

Brazil did it a while ago. Nobody died [yet]

Nalivai@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:57 next collapse

That you know of

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 13:58 next collapse

Some kids have medical issues and need a phone to monitor their health or text family for advice and help since they may be young. It’s also nice to track the kids with their phone when they’re walking too and from school.

fluffy@feddit.org on 11 Apr 20:00 next collapse

We did not even have dumb phones … somehow we still survived …

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 03:28 collapse

Yea but now we do. And not every one did survive

NightCrawlerProMax@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 05:48 collapse

Right. Kids used to die like flies back in the day when there were no smartphones.

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 12:35 collapse

Jesus Christ exaggerating what I said like talking to a trump voter

Wanpieserino@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 14:16 collapse

Some minority of kids can be exempted. You’re the one exaggerating

Wanpieserino@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 14:15 collapse

Brazil and nobody dying, what kind of propaganda is this?

Auli@lemmy.ca on 11 Apr 12:08 next collapse

What’s funny is all the rich tech elite send their kids to schools that don’t use tech to the same degree as public schools. Wonder why.

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 17:43 next collapse

Probably because elite schools have smaller class sizes or teacher/student ratios thereby making it less necessary to have the ability to disseminate information via mass means with technology. Put it all up on a big screen where 30 kids can see it, send the assignments out to 120 kids via google classroom on school issued chromebooks (because there are plenty of kids from families that cannot afford computers), and do all the grading and review digitally. I’d be willing to bet those expensive private schools use plenty of tech, maybe kids carry Macbook Airs instead, but there’s no escape from tech in schools.

SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 19:21 collapse

Because personal tutors are engaging directly with the student the whole session?

AI_toothbrush@lemmy.zip on 11 Apr 13:27 next collapse

Maybe you should fix the systematic problem instead of doing surface level fixes that impact the freedom and mobility of minors.

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:00 next collapse

Wouldn’t no phomes increase mobility since parents cant trqck their location

Gibibit@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 05:55 next collapse

This is solving a systematic problem. The problem of social media companies having free reign to make kids addicted. This will give french kids more freedom to think and do actual things with their life.

Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf on 12 Apr 13:46 collapse

Taking away their addictive propaganda gadgets is freedom, lol.

PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social on 11 Apr 13:30 next collapse

That’s a good way to keep children from documenting and reporting abuse.

CalipherJones@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 14:24 next collapse

Get real bro. Phones are a massive distraction in the classroom.

PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social on 11 Apr 14:28 next collapse

Surveillance for me not for thee.

piecat@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 16:39 collapse

Two things can be true

misteloct@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 21:58 collapse

Maybe normalize bringing a camera then? Photography is not banned.

PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social on 11 Apr 23:30 collapse

The phone is a camera and more.

Seriously admit the problem is teachers can’t control the class not ban the only lifeline kids with only one parent who works has.

a_postmodern_hat@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 15:12 next collapse

The cover image for this piece smells AI generated

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 16:22 next collapse

Eh, checking out the source (Drazen Zigic via Getty Images), he seems legit.

higgsboson@dubvee.org on 11 Apr 16:26 collapse

istockphoto.com/…/group-of-teenagers-using-mobile…

I suppose it is possible the submitter used AI uncredited, but I doubt it. For one thing, there are other images of the same models in the artist’s page. Second, the state of AI image generation when this was submitted (June 2023) was pretty terrible for things like this.

More likely is that the image “looks like AI” to you because most image generation models were trained on Common Crawl, which includes at least tens of thousands of curated (royalty-free) images. In other words, AI models generate images that look like stock photos because that is what they know how to generate.

Bloomcole@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 17:49 next collapse

I can’t believe it wasn’t like that since the beginning.
How is it not one of the many distracting things they would ban immediately?

FourWaveforms@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 20:42 next collapse

I think it has to do with the Columbine school shootings.

Bloomcole@lemmy.world on 13 Apr 09:15 collapse

We’re talking about France here.
And they still have phones in school in a lot of other coutries.

CaptnNMorgan@lemmy.world on 13 Apr 02:15 collapse

Some definitely tried. I got suspended in middle school because I forgot to turn my phone on silent and it went off in class. They had a “zero tolerance” policy, so it didn’t matter that it was an accident

SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 19:25 next collapse

Make school fun and not a prison and then kids don’t need phones like their office worker parents do.

NightCrawlerProMax@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 05:47 next collapse

Doesn’t matter if the teacher is an absolute gem and knows how to captivate kids who want to learn. Most kids prefer the dopamine hit from social media and other phone usage compared to actually learning. It just ruins it for kids who actually want to learn.

Jimius@discuss.tchncs.de on 12 Apr 07:39 collapse

You could be in the finest school in the world and the phone would still win.

Also, France started doing this a few years ago already and has seen improvement across every metric. Better grades, more socializing, 80% less bullying, less anxious kids. They only downside they found? Parents complaining they were unable to call the kids at any moment.

astutemural@midwest.social on 12 Apr 01:24 next collapse

Stupid. Kids are more informed and hooked into current events than ever before, specifically because of phones and the Internet. Hell, half of most peoples’ jobs are looking up reference material online. You want kids to succeed, hand them a big list of the best places to look for the answers and let them use their phones on the test.

Gibibit@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 05:52 next collapse

A good reason for banning smartphones is social media addiction. Not internet searching. Its currently normal for 12 year olds to be on their phone 6-12 hours a day. And because of peer pressure parents can’t do anything about it. A kid without a phone is isolated because everything happens in chat and social media.

There are more thorough solutions like age gating social media but a blanket school ban is a good start. If you still don’t believe me you should really read up on what smartphones do to a kid. Addiction, lack of self control, no attention span, nearsightedness, the list goes on. Based on leaked research by TikTok itself btw.

In China they don’t destroy their own kids because they already know the effects. TikTok shows different stuff there (educational content and propaganda), and kids are limited to 40m(!!!) per day. Everyone is going to deal with scores of fucked up kids while they don’t.

astutemural@midwest.social on 12 Apr 06:18 next collapse

China limits social media because they repress free speech and political association. TikTok and other social media was a huge part of why there was such an outcry over the invasion of Ukraine and the genocide in Gaza. They doubly limit what kids can see because students are often hugely influential in political activism - especially in China, where students were an integral part of both the revolution(s) and Tiananmen Square. China’s gov is pants-shittingly terrified of another student-led revolution/crisis/etc and keep a very close watch on what the kids are saying and seeing.

BlueMagma@sh.itjust.works on 12 Apr 06:42 collapse

They also use their phones a lot to harass each other, they can film, and take pictures of any other kid at school and post it online to harass them. Bullying has been really increasing thanks to phones in schools.

UltraMasculine@sopuli.xyz on 12 Apr 05:59 next collapse

Even though it’s easier to find information than like 30 years before, kids nowadays do NOT look for news or some other “sensible” information. They watch stupid TikTok videos and things like that (yes yes, there’s always some exceptions). Smartphones has become a big problem in schools. You would know that if you followed the news.

Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf on 12 Apr 13:43 collapse

Kids have no clue how the internet works for actual research. They just endlessly scroll and gobble up all of the Nazi bullshit that’s spread around. The internet is dead. Smartphones are highly efficient propaganda gadgets.

cy_narrator@discuss.tchncs.de on 12 Apr 06:14 collapse

We didnt have any kind of phone when we were in school

jaschen@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 21:01 collapse

I had pagers.

cy_narrator@discuss.tchncs.de on 13 Apr 03:37 collapse

Except I was not born yet when pagers were a thing