Conference to discuss smartphone impact on children

A teenage girl putting her smartphone into a green secure pouch, to be magnetically locked for the day. There is a brick wall behind her.
Pupils at Cardinal Newman School in Brighton lock smartphones in magnetically sealed pouches [Sara Smith/BBC]

Leaders from 34 schools in Brighton and Hove are to meet to discuss the impact smartphones have on children.

It follows schemes introduced to limit their usage during the school day – including one school that enforced a complete ban due to concerns over safeguarding.

Sarah Raymond, from the campaign group Smartphone Free Childhood, which has organised the conference on Thursday evening, says it is "too important an issue for us to say we can't do anything about it."

However, the group says children with medical conditions that require app usage are exceptions to the rule.

Since September students at Cardinal Newman Catholic School in Brighton have been told they must put their phones in pouches that are locked until the end of the day, and can only be unlocked with a magnetic device fixed to a wall.

Assistant headteacher Shaun Meaney said a voluntary ban in place during the previous academic year had not worked.

"The temptation of a phone buzzing in your pocket is too much for lots of our young people to resist," he said.

Mr Meaney said phones distracted students in class and were a safeguarding risk.

"There was also the danger of cyber bullying, taking pictures without consent and videos that could be compounded in a negative and unkind way."

Shaun Meaney, wearing a light blue jacket, shirt and dark blue tie, holds up a pouch for a smartphone, in front of a brick wall, with the school's sign in the background.
Assistant headteacher Shaun Meaney says the phone pouches are necessary [Sara Smith/BBC]

Smartphone Free Childhood has claimed the parents of nearly 3,000 children have signed a pact, vowing not to buy their child a smartphone until they were 14 years old.

Ms Raymond, regional leader of the group, described smartphones as "addictive by design", highlighting sleep deprivation and cyber bullying as issues.

"They are experience blockers. Children need to be in the real world," she said.

"We know that the younger they are given a smartphone, the worse their mental health is.

"Smartphones are a gateway to harmful content, whether that be pornography [or] violent content," Ms Raymond said.

"It's not the kind of thing you would show children in the real world."

However, Smartphone Free Childhood said if a child with diabetes needed to use an app to regulate their insulin levels, or any other medical condition, they should use one.

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