Some schools are pulling the plug on student phones
Dr. Kristen Ring walked into the cafeteria at Hutchison School one day in March and saw a table of adolescent girls, certainly a familiar sight at the all-girls private school in East Memphis.
But what bothered Ring, Hutchison’s president and head of school, was that each girl had a phone in her hand. They were still chatting with each other, but just barely. The phones were the focus, not the faces around the table.
“It made me sad because the phone created a barrier from authentic and meaningful connection that they didn’t recognize,” said Ring, whose school has about 800 students from preschool through 12th grade. “We wanted to think about what we would change if they didn’t have access to a cellphone.”
That was a turning point, Ring said, in her school’s new policy banning cell phones during the school day. Beginning with the 2024-25 school year, all Hutchison students must put their phones in a locked box at the start of the day and retrieve them from that box at the end of the day.
No phones during the school day, period.
Topics
Subscriber Only CellphonesThank you for supporting local journalism.
Subscribers to The Daily Memphian help fund our not-for-profit newsroom of nearly 40 local journalists plus more than 20 freelancers, all of whom work around the clock to cover the issues impacting our community. Subscriptions - and donations - also help fund our community access programs which provide free access to K-12 schools, community organizations, and more. Thank you for making our work possible.
Jody Callahan
Jody Callahan graduated with degrees in journalism and economics from what is now known as the University of Memphis. He has covered news in Memphis for more than 25 years.
Want to comment on our stories or respond to others? Join the conversation by subscribing now. Only paid subscribers can add their thoughts or upvote/downvote comments. Our commenting policy can be viewed here.