Schools in England Face Mandatory Mobile Phone Ban Under New Legislation
House of Lords backs amendment making it legal requirement; Commons vote expected Wednesday
L'essentiel
- The UK government is set to make mobile phone bans in English schools a legal requirement through an amendment to the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill.
- The House of Lords voted 107 majority in favour of the ban during the school day, with exceptions for sixth-formers, medical devices and boarding schools.
- The NASUWT and NAHT teacher unions support the move, which heads to the House of Commons for a vote on Wednesday.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
The Department for Education has previously issued guidance stating mobile phones should not be allowed in schools, but head teachers were able to ignore this if they disagreed. Teacher unions have long voiced concerns that smartphones distract pupils and can contribute to problems such as bullying.
Schools in England would be forced to ban mobile phones under new government plans. Department for Education (DfE) guidance already says phones shouldn't be allowed, but head teachers are able to ignore it if they disagree. An amendment to the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill now proposes making it a legal requirement. Teachers have long voiced concerns that smartphones distract pupils and can add to problems such as bullying. "We have been consistently clear that mobile phones have no place in schools, and the majority already prohibit them," said a DfE spokesperson. "This amendment makes existing guidance statutory, giving legal force to what schools are already doing in practice." On Monday, the House of Lords voted by a majority of 107 to ban phones during the school day. The proposal, by shadow education minister Baroness Barran, includes a potential exception for sixth-formers, medical devices and some boarding school settings. The House of Commons is now expected to vote on the amendment on Wednesday. The NASUWT union previously said it supported a statutory ban, while headteachers' union the NAHT also backs it. NAHT general secretary Paul Whiteman said it would give "clarity" and "remove any ambiguity or differences between how schools approach smartphone policies". "Schools will only then need to decide how to implement and enforce a ban across their school community and the government must provide any support they require to do so effectively," added Mr Whiteman. Skills minister Baroness Smith of Malvern said the government had listened to parliament and "to concerns about how we support headteachers in delivering on this policy". However Laura Trott, the shadow education secretary, painted it as a win for the Conservatives. "I am delighted we have forced Labour to see sense and U-turn," she said ."This is fantastic news for headteachers, parents and pupils across the country."
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
House of Commons will pass the amendment on Wednesday
Très probable · En quelques jours
Schools will need government support to implement ban effectively
Probable · En quelques semaines
Questions ouvertes
- What specific enforcement mechanisms will schools face for non-compliance?
- Will there be funding provided to help schools implement the ban?
- How will the exception for sixth-formers be defined and implemented?






