Pay £25 to lock up your child’s smartphone, school tells parents

Teacher removes mobile phones from pupils
Teacher removes mobile phones from pupils

Parents have been told they will have to buy £25 pouches to lock up their children’s smartphones under a proposed new policy at a school in East Sussex.

Cardinal Newman Catholic School in Hove, a state secondary, has told parents that from September pupils will be expected to have a magnet-secured wallet as part of its uniform policy.

Pupils will have to lock their devices away in pouches made by Yondr, an American company, at the start of the school day, making them inaccessible until they go home.

Claire Jarman, the head teacher of the school, told parents that too much time was having to be spent on enforcing its existing smartphone ban.

The Cardinal Newman Catholic School
The Cardinal Newman Catholic School - SIMON DACK/ALAMY LIVE NEWS

In a letter to parents, seen by The Argus, a local newspaper, Ms Jarman said: “As a school we are increasingly concerned about the impact of smartphones on our young people.

“Students receive up to three strikes per half term until they are required to hand in their phones to staff.

“Speaking bluntly, this is not working; too many students at Cardinal Newman School are disregarding the rule and failing to hand in when required.

“This is in turn creating a huge workload for our staff, time and energy we would prefer to be focusing on supporting students in more positive ways.”

The letter also told parents that the cost of the pouch would be around £25, The Argus reported.

It is understood that the proposed policy is still under consultation. More than 200 state and private schools in the UK have already introduced Yondr pouches in their schools.

A reliable way to monitor use

The mother of a pupil starting at Cardinal Newman in September said she supported plans to introduce the pouches.

Writing on Facebook in a public group, she said: “This seems like a reliable way to monitor phone use. Kids don’t need their phones during the school day, but they do on the way to and from.”

A spokesman for Yondr said: “Parents are not simply purchasing a pouch , but a comprehensive phone-free programme which ensures their child can now learn and socialise in a distraction-free environment.

“The cost of the Yondr programme at £25 per student delivers great value, when we consider the huge benefits that our Yondr partners see once they become phone-free schools.”

The Department for Education issued guidance in February backing head teachers who ban mobile phones throughout the school day, including at break time.

Since February, tens of thousands of parents have joined a grassroots movement, Parents for a Smartphone-free Childhood, launched to help parents support each other in delaying giving their children smartphones.

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