More than 70 percent of high school teachers say student phone distraction is a “major problem,” according to a survey this year by Pew Research.
That’s why states are mounting a bipartisan effort to crack down on rampant student cellphone use.
So far this year, at least eight states have passed laws, issued orders or adopted rules to curb phone use among students during school hours.
The issue isn’t simply that some children and teenagers compulsively use apps like Snap, TikTok and Instagram during lessons, distracting themselves and their classmates.
In many schools, students have also used their phones to bully, sexually exploit and share videos of physical attacks on their peers.
Organizations:
Pew Research