School smartphone bans seen as ‘punitive’ by young people, study says
A University College London (UCL) report, released as England implemented a statutory ban on smartphones in schools, found that young people view outright bans as "punitive" and "overly simplistic." The study surveyed 732 secondary school students, 27 teachers, and 41 parents, revealing a significant generational divide: while a large majority of adults favored bans, 75% of pupils disagreed. Students argued that smartphones are essential for communication, safety, emotional regulation, and daily organization, providing access to tools like bus timetables and support networks.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA University College London (UCL) report, released as England implemented a statutory ban on smartphones in schools, found that young people view outright bans as "punitive" and "overly simplistic." The study surveyed 732 secondary school students, 27 teachers, and 41 parents, revealing a significant generational divide: while a large majority of adults favored bans, 75% of pupils disagreed. Students argued that smartphones are essential for communication, safety, emotional regulation, and daily organization, providing access to tools like bus timetables and support networks. They also warned that bans could drive issues like cyberbullying underground, making reporting concerns harder. The report suggests schools should instead focus on educating students about the digital world.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedA statutory ban on smartphones in schools in England came into force the day after the UCL report was published.
75% of pupils disagreed with blanket smartphone bans in schools, while 87% of teachers and 88% of parents supported them.
Young people view school smartphone bans as 'punitive' rather than helpful, according to a UCL study.
Students use smartphones for essential daily life navigation, learning support, communication, safety, and emotional regulation.
Outright smartphone bans in schools are likely to be ineffective and may have unintended negative consequences.