Current:Home > InvestWhy you should stop texting your kids at school -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Why you should stop texting your kids at school
View
Date:2025-04-22 03:34:54
Virginia high school teacher Joe Clement keeps track of the text messages parents have sent students sitting in his economics and government classes:
— “What did you get on your test?”
— “Did you get the field trip form signed?”
— “Do you want chicken or hamburgers for dinner tonight?”
Clement has a plea for parents: Stop texting your kids at school.
Parents are distressingly aware of the distractions and the mental health issues associated with smartphones and social media. But teachers say parents might not realize how much those struggles play out at school.
One culprit? Mom and Dad themselves, whose stream-of-consciousness questions add to a climate of constant interruption and distraction from learning. Even when schools regulate or ban cellphones, it’s hard for teachers to enforce it. And the constant buzzes on watches and phones are occupying critical brain space regardless of whether kids are sneaking a peek.
A few changes in parents’ behavior can help make phones less distracting at school. Here’s what teachers and experts recommend.
TRY IT: STOP TEXTING YOUR KID AT SCHOOL
Many parents stay in touch with their child by texting, but school is a place for focusing on learning and developing independence. Teachers say you can still reach your child if you have a change in plans or a family emergency: Just contact the front office.
If the message is not urgent, it can probably wait.
Think of it this way: “If you came to school and said, ‘Can you pull my child out of calculus so I can tell them something not important?’ we would say no,” central Virginia school counselor Erin Rettig said.
Teachers emphasized: They are not saying parents are to blame for school cellphone battles, just that parents can do more to help. Tell your kids, for example, not to text home unless it is urgent. And if they do, ignore it.
“When your children are texting you stuff that can wait — like, ‘Can I go to Brett’s house five days from now?’ — don’t respond,” said Sabine Polak, one of three mothers who co-founded the Phone-Free Schools Movement. “You have to stop engaging. That’s just feeding the problem.”
CUT THE CORD FROM 8 TO 3
Many parents got used to being in constant contact during the COVID-19 pandemic, when kids were home doing online school. They have kept that communication going as life has otherwise returned to normal.
“We call it the digital umbilical cord. Parents can’t let go. And they need to,” Clement said.
Parents might not expect their kids to respond immediately to texts (though many do). But when students pull out their phones to reply, it opens the door to other social media distractions.
ANXIETY VIA TEXT MESSAGE
At parent workshops, Rettig, the school counselor in Virginia, tells parents they are contributing to children’s anxiety by sending messages, tracking their whereabouts and checking grades daily, which doesn’t give kids space to be independent at school.
Some teachers say they get emails from parents right after returning graded exams, before the class is over, because kids feel the need (or are told) to report grades immediately to parents.
Dr. Libby Milkovich, a developmental and behavioral pediatrician at Children’s Mercy Kansas City, says she asks parents to consider what kids miss out on by having parents at arms’ reach during school hours.
“By texting back and forth with a parent, a child is unable to practice either self-calming or problem-solving skills,” Milkovich said. “It’s easy to text, but if I don’t have a phone, I have to go ask the teacher or I have to figure it out on my own.”
Some kids who oppose school cellphone bans say it’s helpful to reach out to parents when they’re feeling anxious or worried at school. For children with serious anxiety who are accustomed to texting parents for reassurance, Milkovich suggests phasing in limits so the child can gradually practice having more independence. She urges parents to ask themselves: Why does my child need constant access to a phone?
“Often parents say, ‘I want to be able to reach my child at any time,’ which has nothing to do with the child’s outcome. It’s because of the parents’ anxiety,” she said.
TAKE AWAY THAT OLD PHONE
Beth Black, a high school English teacher in the San Francisco Bay Area, tells parents to consider confiscating their child’s old phones.
Her school requires students to put phones in a special cellphone holder when they enter classrooms. But she has seen students stash their old, inactive phone there, and hold onto the phone that works.
Like many teachers, she says phones aren’t the only problem. There’s also the earbud issue.
“Forty percent of my students have at least one earbud in when they walk into class,” Black said. “The kids will set their phone in the holder to music and they’ll listen to music in class in one earbud.”
TURN OFF NOTIFICATIONS
Parents’ reining in their texts will only go so far. So work with your kids to turn off some or all of their attention-stealing notifications.
To prove just how distracting smartphones are, Clement ran an in-class experiment where he asked students to take their phones off silent and switch on notifications for two minutes.
“It sounded like an old-time video arcade — bizzing, buzzing, dinging and ringing for two solid minutes,” he said.
Many studies have found students check their phones frequently during class. A study last year from Common Sense Media found teens get bombarded with as many as 237 notifications a day. About 25% of them pop up during the school day, mostly from friends on social media.
“Every time our focus is interrupted, it takes a lot of brain power and energy to get back on task,” said Emily Cherkin, a Seattle-based teacher-turned-consultant who specializes in screen-time management.
Teachers say the best school cellphone policy is one that physically removes the phone from the child. Otherwise, it’s hard to compete.
“When the phone vibrates in their pocket, now their focus is on their pocket. And they’re wondering, ‘How do I get it out to the table? How do I check it?’” said Randy Freiman, a high school chemistry teacher in upstate New York. “You ask them a question and they haven’t heard a word you’ve said. Their brain is elsewhere.”
___
The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (97)
Related
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- UAW says a majority of workers at an Alabama Mercedes plant have signed cards supporting the union
- New York roofing contractor pleads guilty to OSHA violation involving worker's death in 2022
- Leader of Georgia state Senate Democrats won’t seek office again this year
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Coal company owned by West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice is found in contempt
- What counts as an exception to South Dakota's abortion ban? A video may soon explain
- 3-year-old fatally shot after man 'aggressively' accused girlfriend of infidelity, officials say
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Miranda Kerr Gives Birth to Baby No. 4, Her 3rd With Evan Spiegel
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Wendy's to roll out Uber-style surge pricing as soon as next year
- A work stoppage to support a mechanic who found a noose is snarling school bus service in St. Louis
- Georgia will spend $392 million to overhaul its gold-domed capitol and build new legislative offices
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- 3 dividend stocks that yield more than double the S&P 500
- The Daily Money: Let them eat cereal?
- Sperm whale's slow death trapped in maze-like Japanese bay raises alarm over impact of global warming
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
A Small Pennsylvania College Is Breaking New Ground in Pursuit of a Clean Energy Campus
What's on the Michigan ballot for the 2024 primary? Here's what's being voted on today.
Don Henley is asked at Hotel California lyrics trial about the time a naked teen overdosed at his home in 1980
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
US couple whose yacht was hijacked by prisoners were likely thrown overboard, authorities say
Nick Offerman slams 'homophobic hate' for his 'Last of Us' episode
Lawsuit claims isolation and abuse at Wyoming Boys School