RICHMOND, VA — Given the increasing evidence of the impact cell phone and social media usage has on education and youth mental health, Governor Glenn Youngkin today issued Executive Order 33, which directs the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) to draft guidance for public school divisions to adopt local policies and procedures establishing cell phone-free education.
The EO directs VDOE to initiate a robust public engagement effort with parents, students, teachers, local school leaders and other stakeholders to develop collaboratively policies and procedures that establish the age-appropriate restriction or elimination of cell phone use during instructional time, as well as to establish protocols allowing parents to contact their children in emergency and other important situations.
In addition, the Governor announced today that the VDOE and the Department of Behavioral Health and Development Services (DBDHS) will make a combined $500,000 available from existing funds to support implementation of this mental health and safety initiative.
“This essential action will promote a healthier and more focused educational environment where every child is free to learn. Creating cell phone and social media-free educational environments in Virginia’s K-12 education system will benefit students, parents, and educators,” said Governor Glenn Youngkin. “Today’s Executive Order both establishes the clear goal to protect the health and safety of our students by limiting the amount of time they are exposed to addictive cell phones and social media and eliminates clear distractions in the classroom. It also kicks off the robust conversations among parents, students, teachers, and school and community leaders necessary to design and implement these policies and procedures at the local level.”
Implementing cell phone-free education in Virginia’s K-12 public schools is critical, especially given youth chronic health conditions, such as depression and anxiety, that are driven in part by extensive social media and cell phone use. Children spend an average of 4.8 hours a day on social media, and recent studies indicate that spending more than three hours a day on social media doubles the risk of poor mental health for adolescents. Most alarming is the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention data from 2019-2021, reporting that the rate of suicide has increased 167% since 2010 for girls and 91% since 2010 for boys. In the same timeframe, boys and girls experienced a spike in depression of 161% and 145%, respectively.
“The data is clear, and it is time for Virginians to come together to address the damage of social media and screens to healthy childhoods. Government cannot be the sole solution to this crisis; school communities – especially parents and teachers – must work together to discuss and develop common sense approaches to limit screen time, prioritize open channels of communication, and re-establish norms that reinforce healthy and vibrant learning communities,” said Secretary of Education Aimee Guidera.
“Many parents and teachers struggle to balance socializing and social media, play or learning time and screen time, and true human connection and internet connection,” said Secretary of Health and Human Resources Janet Kelly. “The more we learn, the more we know that too much screen time – especially time spent on addictive apps – is harmful to kids’ physical and mental health. A few weeks ago, the Surgeon General of the United States issued a formal advisory suggesting that tech companies be required to put a warning label on social media apps. Governor Youngkin’s Executive Order 33 complements that advisory well. Too many childhoods have ended because of the wild west of addictive apps, and it is time we work together to bring childhood back.”
The Executive Order directs VDOE to publish their draft guidance by August 15. After considering feedback from stakeholders, VDOE will issue final guidance in September for local school divisions to adopt cell phone-free education policies and procedures by January 1, 2025.
Nothing in this Executive Order is intended to prohibit school divisions from adopting age-appropriate policies and procedures ahead of this date or that are more comprehensive than the guidance issued by VDOE.
The Department of Education will facilitate listening sessions and other stakeholder engagement opportunities over the next six weeks to solicit public input on this policy, gather feedback on best practices currently underway in Virginia public schools, and receive input for the draft guidance establishing cell phone-free education in K-12 public schools.
“Cell phones and digital media have caused pre-teens and teens to disconnect from the real world, have increased mental health challenges, and have caused significant disruption in the important daily learning opportunities in their classrooms,” said Superintendent of Public Instruction Lisa Coons. “Parents and teachers understand the importance of creating cell phone-free education in our schools so that students can focus on instruction and learning during the school day. We look forward to facilitating conversations around the danger to our children of cell phones, social media, and the impact of screen time and will focus on creating guidance that protects the health and safety of our students.”
Funding from VDOE and DBDHS will support state and local efforts to facilitate family nights and community engagement on the youth mental health crisis and cell phone use best practices as well as enable school divisions in need of assistance to receive microgrants to help implement best practices in their local community. As part of the Back-to-School Season, there will be a series of Commonwealth Conversations across Virginia to provide opportunities for discussion on how schools and communities can build new norms around phone usage.
While some school divisions in Virginia have already implemented cell phone limitation protocols, this Executive Order is the first statewide effort to enhance the learning environment by eliminating or severely restricting cell phone devices during instructional time. Recent studies indicate that students who use their phones during class learn less, achieve lower grades, and can face a cumulative, lasting, and detrimental impact on their ability to focus and engage in their studies. |
Pam Glass
July 9, 2024 @ 8:14 pm
I appreciate this Governor. Just wish they could ban TikTok
Cynthia
July 9, 2024 @ 9:56 pm
It’s about time. The cellphone teen crisis is ongoing. I see kids walking around like zombies looking at social media. Someone had to make this decision and I’m thankful our governor cares enough about our kids to do something . I’m sure teachers will be thrilled with this. I can’t imagine what they have been through with this
Marcia
July 10, 2024 @ 12:03 am
Good for him! Hoping the VDOE can create an excellent policy for this. Not a parent, but know teachers cannot control their classroom with the phone situation as it is now.
Laura Tomlin
July 10, 2024 @ 12:13 am
Currently, children are not allowed to use their phone during school hours! So that should not be the problem. What about the time spent on Chromebooks/laptops? Most children in the elementary level were caught on you tube or some type of game! So of the problems do begin at home . What about protocol for receiving mental health care?
Jennifer
July 10, 2024 @ 12:58 am
Yes! I hope there will be guidance and accountability for teachers/staff as well.
Stephanie Huffman
July 10, 2024 @ 4:58 am
Why not take computers out of the classroom and go back to paper and books. Kids need to be educated not shoved on a computer.
Billy
July 10, 2024 @ 12:59 pm
Kids need to be educated not shoved on a computer as well because there basically the same thing
G.G. Turpin
July 10, 2024 @ 1:06 pm
@Laura Tomlin
Self-discipline is, and should be, taught at home.
Susan Whittaker
July 10, 2024 @ 2:16 pm
I agree! However, chrome books are also bad. During Covid , I could see kids going their laptop before reading what they were supposed to. They could only search by topic, but they could find what was needed.
Other students in other areas were online wit students and this helped. Some sent weekly worksheets with fill in the blanks answers that they soon found out would not be graded!
I know this is a cheaper way for the school board to provide materials. The last two years we were given new textbooks to select, we ended up with what we had! Boring and not updated!!!
T lester
July 10, 2024 @ 2:47 pm
Hold the teachers and staff to the same standards as the students
Christina
July 10, 2024 @ 3:09 pm
What about the children of single parents who have siblings and who need their phones during transportation? I agree with no usage during the day but the whole purpose for my teen having one at all is for transportation to and from school with siblings and in the event I’m not home right when they get off the bus. Not all parents have a village to help and the world is getting increasingly hard for us to navigate due to some of these “well meaning policies” and such.
Pat
July 10, 2024 @ 5:02 pm
All these tablets in classrooms is the biggest problem! For example… sol test on a tablet may work for some who have been shown correctly how to use it and can do it in their heads but I don’t know many adults whom can do that espeacially in math! isn’t that considered screen time? A student can only learn what they are taught! I know of 2 students whom took the sol on tablets and failed simply because they was not shown how to correct there initial answer! both said if they had it on paper they could have corrected answers!so who is to blame for this? surely not the phones nor the parents!
A
July 10, 2024 @ 6:11 pm
I do not agree I think they need there cell phones to call home in case of a shooting or a crisis and instead of worrying about cell phones why not bring the Bible back to school and teaching about God that is what wrong with the schools is they took God out of the schools
Sue Brown
July 10, 2024 @ 6:50 pm
I agree with MsHuffman. Take chime books, iPads and any other device out of the classroom and go back to old fashion standing infront Of the classroom actually teaching and have students having interaction with each other in the classroom. Talking and having discussions among each other.
Whitney Stroop
July 10, 2024 @ 7:05 pm
How about going back to like it used to be, books and paper and pencil and get the computers out of their faces or worry about bullying in school.
Phillys
July 10, 2024 @ 8:11 pm
when I was in highschool, I needed to call home because of a bad rash that popped up. my teacher decided it wasn’t bad enough to call home and I wound up in hospital that night…it spread full body and got in my blood stream…no teacher, school nurse or principal should ever have a right to decide if a child calls for a parent. also as a mother of girls…my child could contact me from a bathroom stall to bring new clothes and or supplies when their monthly started unannounced. no girl should have to walk from the bathroom to the office with blood stained clothes when a quick cell phone call home could prevent that embarrassing situation….reasons for teenagers and cell phones are not always black and white…all these stupid policies just keep providing more and more reasons to Home School.
Justin
July 10, 2024 @ 10:24 pm
I do not agree with it at all. They used to push this issue when I was in school. I paid my cell phone bill and they nor my parents did. I worked for my money after school every day and on the weekends. If I want to use what I pay for that’s my choice, not someone else’s.
D Deryck
July 11, 2024 @ 7:33 am
the way I see it the problem isn’t the phone it’s the discipline. “if you get caught using your cell phone you get to scrub toilets” probably have some really clean toilets
Heather
July 11, 2024 @ 4:36 pm
what about children that have no choice but to have a phone with continous glucose monitors for diabetes this is how they manage it as well as report reading to the nurse, parents etc.
Brittany Marshall
July 11, 2024 @ 5:35 pm
While i understand the good intent here, I for one will say my child will carry their cell phone to school and have it on them or in their backpack always. I will not be a parents who hears about a threat at (god forbid) their school and have no contact at all…. I can barely get the school itself to answer their phone on a good day. There are more important issues to worry about than this.
Mitchell
July 11, 2024 @ 7:08 pm
the same goes for adults it is just addictive all round both children and adults. it is sad to set and watch families engage in their electronic devices instead of each other.
seth lohr
July 12, 2024 @ 6:57 am
here we go Authoritation Gwen Youngkin pushes his beliefs on people cause he knows whats best for everyone, when schools literally already have cell phone use policies, wastes of tax dollars! Get Your Christian Evangelical Extremist Government off of my State, you just ran for governor so you can run for President, and you suck at being governor, you do nothing, no compromises or working with Democrats to better to whole state. All you do Gwen is push you agenda that is a full MAGA load of crap.
Concerned Parent
July 12, 2024 @ 12:19 pm
I, as many other parents, send my child to school with his phone. However, he has been told that it is to stay on silent during school hours and it is only with him as a means of “emergency” communication.
If something were to happen at school negatively, fighting, possible threatening or violence of any kind that police would need to respond to, I have instructed him to call or text me immediately.
If he is having a very bad day personally, headache (which he gets from time to time that are more like mild migraines) he has been instructed to message me during lunchtime or between classes but not to disrupt class by any means. Sometimes I will tell him to go to the nurse for some ibuprofen or Tylenol depending on the situation.
There are many reasons for our children to have their phones on them during school hours with that being said, there should absolutely be restrictions and or regulations on how and when their phones can be used.
I don’t think banning phones from school is the best option, I do however agree completely with having rules for use.
There should be a happy medium. What that is and how to implement it, is where I think this should start.
Angela Harrison
July 12, 2024 @ 10:51 pm
Oh, I’m sorry; I thought he said, “On Day 1 of my administration, I signed an executive order that delivered on a promise I made to parents, empowering them to make decisions regarding their children,” said Glenn Youngkin. It seems like he’s contradicting himself.
I have been a substitute teacher for long enough to know that this is only a symptom of a much larger issue: discipline or the lack thereof within our school systems.
The most concerning part of this entire scenario is looking at these statistics of who calls the police and what has been the most beneficial during mass shootings and especially school shootings: its students. Strip them of that capability. The death toll is going to rise dramatically, not only for students, staff, and administration but also for the police officers who were going to be going in with a lot less knowledge. And yes, I know I didn’t have a cell phone growing up until I could drive. My parents never had cell phones. I get it. People have survived generations without them. Fortunately, in my generation, school shootings were a fairly random act of violence. Now, they are just another new story.
Exasperated Teacher
July 13, 2024 @ 12:31 am
Cell Phones should stay in bookbags turned off during school hours. They have become an issue for schools from Kindergarten to 12th grade. Kids are constantly trying to get on their phones during class. kids text parents on their smart watches. It makes teaching extremely difficult. Kids record other kids and teachers constantly. This order doesn’t go far enough. The rule should be that they can not be out or on during school hours.
Tori T.
July 13, 2024 @ 5:35 am
I understand the reasoning behind this. But I hope there will be an allowance for exceptions to be made when necessary. Our children’s schools already have cell phone usage policies in place. But not every child fits neatly in a box. My 14yo child uses his phone as a medical device. It connects to his insulin pump and allows him to dose his medicine as needed. It also sends alerts to us parents as well as his doctors when his blood sugar levels are too high or too low. It allows me to see his blood sugar readings and gives us the ability to communicate and give guidance as how to he needs to treat the highs or lows. There are some days when we have to make frequent changes to his insulin regimen, and having the ability to do it through quick & discreet text messages rather than disrupting his instructional time to go back & forth to the nurse’s office is beneficial to him, his teachers, and his classmates. I realize he is in a minority, but again, not every child fits neatly into the same box, and some exceptions will need to be made.
Ann Baker
July 13, 2024 @ 6:19 am
They still need to be allowed to have them to arrange pick up after school. There aren’t any pay phones anymore. They are a benefit for them to have when they ride the bus home also.
Kelly Thomas
July 13, 2024 @ 7:29 am
While I agree to the no use during instruction time I feel, due to increase in school shootings that children should be allowed to have them for Emergencies ( Like such). I also think that the schools need to eliminate the access to YouTube & other apps on the Chrome books. WHY do they need it on a school issued chromebook!?
JME
July 13, 2024 @ 9:47 am
The world has definitely evolved into a technology-based agenda. Some of us can remember when cell phones, computers and other devices were non-existent and we did just fine. Blaming the Governor for trying to bring this back is not the answer. Fix your house and teach your children right from wrong. Kids are not disciplined enough by their parents these days. Most of them do whatever they want with no recourse. School administrators need to have more say in how to handle kids and situations that arise at school. Yes, they are your children, but first and foremost you are entrusting the schools to take care of your kids when you put them on the bus or drop them off at school. So let the administrators follow through with taking care of your children while they are at school and making decisions that are in their best interests. If you disagree with that then home-school your children and then you can control whatever they do.
Kate
July 14, 2024 @ 12:44 am
I agree that they should not be allowed to use cellphones during school hours, but I’ll be damned if anyone takes a phone away from my child in this era of school shootings and rampant violence and bulling. That phone is there to provide a form of communication in an emergency and also a way to film for evidence if a dangerous situation arises. if your child has a problem with social media, that is a parenting problem. Don’t allow our kids to become even more vulnerable should a situation arise where they need it.
J
July 14, 2024 @ 1:57 pm
People talk govt should stay out of people lives. A cell phone in the school should be up to individual parents. Now designated areas and times for cell phones during the school day i agree with. Phones shouldnt interrupt a teacher and students in the classroom Library should be quiet for studying not a cell phone ringing circus. Governor, President, or no other politician should control how people parent their children especially in high school. So a 16 year old can drive to school, but cant have a cell phone there. Dumb