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Cellphones banned in Quebec classrooms after winter break

Many Quebec schools already had rules limiting cellphones in classes
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Quebec鈥檚 decision to restrict cellphone use in the classroom comes into effect in the new year, making it just the second province in the country to implement a provincewide ban, after Ontario. A person uses a cellphone in Ottawa on Monday, July 18, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Quebec鈥檚 new rule banning cellphones in classrooms will be in effect when students return from the holiday break, making the province the second to implement such a measure, after Ontario.

The directive, which aims to reduce distractions in class, enters into force Dec. 31 and applies to public elementary and secondary schools, but it offers teachers flexibility to let students use phones for specific pedagogical purposes.

Many Quebec schools already had rules limiting cellphones in classes before Education Minister Bernard Drainville introduced the ban in August, but some child advocates say it鈥檚 in the interest of children to make restrictions as tough as possible.

Days ahead of Drainville鈥檚 announcement, 脡tienne Bergeron, a high school teacher from Warwick, Que., launched a petition calling on the government to forbid cellphones anywhere on school property.

鈥淚 would have gone a lot further,鈥 Bergeron said in an interview, comparing his petition to what the province ultimately decided to do. 鈥淲hat I want is all personal devices banned in schools 鈥 even in the corridors, the public spaces, the libraries, everywhere.鈥

If a teacher wants students to use cellphones for a pedagogical purpose, he said, the lesson 鈥渨ould have to be something well-defined.鈥

Bergeron says he鈥檚 not anti-technology 鈥 he manages his school鈥檚 creative laboratory and teaches students about programming, music, and video game design, but he says his lessons use digital tools to expand the mind, not to surf aimlessly online.

鈥淭he reality is when young people are on the phone, they are on TikTok, they鈥檙e playing games,鈥 Bergeron said. 鈥淚鈥檓 convinced it鈥檚 not in the mission of Quebec schools to leave our young people in front of these devices that literally make them anti-social.鈥

Quebec鈥檚 Education Department says that by Dec. 31 all schools must have a policy restricting the use of cellphones in classrooms. It will be up to individual school boards to come up with penalties for students who don鈥檛 follow the rules.

Some boards, including the province鈥檚 largest French-language one 鈥 Centre de services scolaire de Montr茅al 鈥 and the English Montreal School Board, have had rules for some time prohibiting cellphones in class outside of authorized lessons.

In Ontario, teachers unions have lamented that their province鈥檚 2019 ban is not being enforced and that cellphones pop up routinely in classrooms. At the Toronto District School Board 鈥 the largest school board in Canada 鈥 chair Rachel Chernos Lin introduced a motion to revisit the issue in January and come up with a new, robust policy to ban cellphones.

鈥淚 would like to see something that has some teeth in it,鈥 Chernos Lin said. 鈥淏ut ultimately 鈥 I hope we will create a culture around cellphone use that is different than what we have now.鈥

Joel Westheimer, a University of Ottawa education professor, isn鈥檛 surprised the Toronto board wants to reopen the debate, calling Ontario鈥檚 rule 鈥渁n extremely imperfect one because it wasn鈥檛 written in a way that was really going to make it happen across the province.鈥

The issue of cellphones has been on the front burner since a UNESCO report in July found that they can disrupt learning; Drainville has said that report spurred him to act.

Several countries have gone further than Quebec and Ontario. In 2018, France banned phones on school grounds for those under the age of 15, while China banned phones for schoolchildren in 2021. The U.K. government announced in October it would issue guidance to support head teachers who want to ban phones in schools, adding that its measure would be in line with similar bans in Italy and Portugal.

鈥淟ots of jurisdictions around the world 鈥 have implemented cellphone bans and have found very positive outcomes from that. Students are less distracted, they report more engagement, and there鈥檚 even been some measures of academic growth and also less loneliness,鈥 Westheimer said.

In Quebec, M茅lanie Laviolette, president of parent group F茅d茅ration des comit茅s de parents du Qu茅bec, is welcoming the rules.

鈥淲hat we hope is that our kids are in the best position to learn, so not having TikTok at their fingertips is a good thing,鈥 Laviolette said.

Katherine Korakakis, head of the English Parents Committee Association of Quebec, called the government鈥檚 decision a 鈥渕issed opportunity鈥 that avoids looking at issues like technology addiction, media literacy or fake news and focuses instead on punitive measures.

鈥淚 think courses on being a digital citizen, how to use technology, talking about addiction, talking about this type of stuff with the students will make a much bigger impact than taking away a phone,鈥 she said.





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