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Phone bans in schools don’t help grades or health, study suggests

February 5, 2025
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Getty Images Four school pupils are standing against a brick wall, not talking to each other as they each look down at a phone in their handsGetty Images

Banning phones in schools is not linked to pupils getting higher grades or having better mental wellbeing, the first study of its kind suggests.

Students’ sleep, classroom behaviour, exercise or how long they spend on their phones overall also seems to be no different for schools with phone bans and schools without, the academics found.

But they did find that spending longer on smartphones and social media in general was linked with worse results for all of those measures.

The first study in the world to look at school phone rules alongside measures of pupil health and education feeds into a fierce debate that has played out in homes and schools in recent years.

Dr Victoria Goodyear, the study’s lead author, told the BBC the findings were not “against” smartphone bans in schools, but “what we’re suggesting is that those bans in isolation are not enough to tackle the negative impacts”.

She said the “focus” now needed to be on reducing how much time students spent on their phones, adding: “We need to do more than just ban phones in schools.”

The University of Birmingham’s findings, peer-reviewed and published by the Lancet’s journal for European health policy, compared 1,227 students and the rules their 30 different secondary schools had for smartphone use at break and lunchtimes.

The schools were chosen from a sample of 1,341 mainstream state schools in England.

The paper says schools restricting smartphone use did not seem to be seeing their intended improvements on health, wellbeing and focus in lessons.

But the research did find a link between more time on phones and social media, and worse mental wellbeing and mental health, less physical activity, poorer sleep, lower grades and more disruptive classroom behaviour.

The study used the internationally recognised Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale to determine participants’ wellbeing. It also looked at students’ anxiety and depression levels.

It asked form teachers about whether their students were on target, below or above target in English and maths.

‘On their phones all the time’

Charlie got his first smartphone in Year 8 – but a strictly enforced ban meant he wasn’t allowed to bring it with him until he started sixth form.

Anyone caught with a smartphone in the lower school at Twyford school, west London, has it confiscated for the rest of the term, which senior staff say is such an “unpopular” punishment that it works as a strong deterrent.

Charlie says the smartphone ban “forces you to hang out and chat with your friends”.

Now in Year 13, he thinks the ban in lower school has “probably” helped him to spend less time scrolling social media – but says lots of his friends are still “on their phones all the time”.

Branwen Jeffreys / BBC Charlie smiles at the camera, with a colourful noticeboard on the wall of the classroom behind himBranwen Jeffreys / BBC

Charlie’s school did not let him bring a smartphone in until sixth form

Colin Crehan, head at Holy Trinity Catholic School in Small Heath, Birmingham, feels a “moral obligation” to help students learn to use their phones in a “safe and controlled space”.

He says phone-related issues, such as devices being a distraction from learning, are “miniscule” because his students value the “freedom” they have been given to use them at break and lunch.

“It’s such a pivotal part of their lives outside of school. For [teachers to] then go into the realms of restricting that within school, we’re ultimately going to set ourselves up for a battle which we’re not going to win,” he adds.

But students at other schools where phones are banned have told BBC News they have seen benefits like less bullying and better social skills – factors not included in the University of Birmingham study. Its authors said more research was needed in this area to draw any links.

Ysgol Aberconwy, in Conwy, changed rules recently so that students’ phones are locked inside magnetic pouches unless a teacher unlocks them for use during class.

The school cites research suggesting rising loneliness at school, and the suggestion that time on social media is linked to lower life satisfaction for some children.

Georgie, 15, says before the rule change, the atmosphere at school “was quite aggressive”.

“There was a lot of fights, and people would just pull out their phone and start filming it. A lot of people would get quite upset,” she said.

Now, Georgie feels arguments do not escalate so much or as often.

“People have got closer, because they’re talking face-to-face,” she said.

It is a change Georgie’s sister Charlotte, 12, found “reassuring” to hear about, as she started Year 7.

Head teacher Ian Gerrard says while bullying hasn’t been “completely eradicated”, the pouches have created “a safe space within school” where students “don’t need to worry about those things”.

Hope Rhodes/BBC News Charlotte and Georgie sit on the arms of a leather chair that their mum, Sarah, is sitting in, at their family home. They are all smiling.Hope Rhodes/BBC News

Georgie (R) says her phone is “very addictive, especially if you go on TikTok. I find myself just scrolling and scrolling, and then before I know it it’s been half an hour”

Despite the lack of clear-cut evidence, Georgie’s mother Sarah says she “absolutely” supports Aberconwy’s policy.

She says she has found it tough not to be able to message her children during exam time.

“It would be nice to be able to sometimes communicate with them to be able to say, ‘has everything gone all right?'” she said.

Other schools have found that parents wanting contact with children to be a sticking point when introducing new rules around phones.

Within a few weeks of The Fulham Boys School in west London bringing in a “brick”-phones-only policy in September, students were “over it”, head teacher David Smith says – but “teething problems” came from parents worried about their children travelling across the capital without apps to help them.

One student recently got on a bus going in the wrong direction, and ended up at the other end of the line to his home neighbourhood – without a smartphone on him to check a map or call home.

The Fulham Boys School Four boys in school blazers and ties stand outside the entrance to The Fulham Boys School. They are all looking at their brick phones.The Fulham Boys School

David Smith says it was “a bit of fun” to see students arrive back to school in September, standing outside the school gates and taking “10 minutes to send a text” as they worked out how to use their new brick phones, which can only be used for calls and basic text messages

The Fulham Boys School David Smith takes a selfie with two students, who are holding their brick phones and smiling, at the back of a school coach. The Fulham Boys School

Mr Smith (left) says the rule extends to school trips – so pupils spend an 18-hour coach journey to France on brick phones, in December

The study may intensify the debate around whether under-16s should be stopped from having smartphones altogether.

Some schools say it is down to parents to act.

The Conservative Party is among those pressing the government to tighten up restrictions within schools.

Labour has previously said the answer could lie with a social media ban for under-16s like in Australia.

Responding to the University of Birmingham study, a government official said teachers already had “clear guidance” to manage phone use in a way that worked for their schools.

The Online Safety Act, which will soon come into effect, would protect young people from harmful content and ensure they had an age-appropriate experience online.

“More robust evidence is needed to reach clear conclusions on the impact of smartphones on children, which is why we have launched our own research, led by the University of Cambridge, into the impact of social media on children’s overall wellbeing,” the official added.

Additional reporting by Branwen Jeffreys and Hope Rhodes.



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