Evidence for and against banning mobile phones in schools: A scoping review

Author:

Campbell Marilyn1ORCID,Edwards Elizabeth J2,Pennell Donna1ORCID,Poed Shiralee2ORCID,Lister Victoria3,Gillett-Swan Jenna1,Kelly Adrian1,Zec Dajana,Nguyen Thuy-Anh2

Affiliation:

1. Queensland University of Technology, Australia

2. The University of Queensland, Australia

3. Griffith University, Australia

Abstract

Public opinions are divided on the relative benefits versus harms of allowing mobile phones in schools. When debating the consequences of mobile phones in schools, politicians often argue that students’ use of mobile phones distract from their learning, increase cyberbullying and lead to poor mental health outcomes. We conducted a scoping review of the global literature, followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR) and pre-registered our protocol with the Open Science Framework (OSF). Our search and screening process identified 22 studies that met our inclusion criteria and shed light on our research questions: whether mobile phone use in schools impacts academic outcomes, mental health and wellbeing and cyberbullying. We found an absence of randomized controlled trials with evidence resting on a small number of studies with different designs, samples, operational definitions of mobile phone bans (i.e. partial, or complete bans) and outcome measures, making reconciliation of findings challenging. Nonetheless, we provide a synthesis of the latest evidence for decision-makers tasked with deciding for or against mobile phone bans in schools. Directions for future research are provided and practical implications for schools are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference69 articles.

1. Abrahamsson S. (n.d.). Distraction or teaching tool: Do smartphone bans in schools help students? Norwegian Institute of Public Health. https://sites.google.com/view/saraabrahamsson/research

2. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework

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