Finland to ban mobile phones in schools


Finland, previously known for its strong performance in the PISA school aptitude tests, is looking to reverse the current declining trend and promote a focused learning environment by passing a law banning mobile phones in schools.

The Program for International Student Assessment assesses the learning outcomes of 15-year-olds in maths, science and reading. Finland’s performance peaked in 2006 but has seen a decline in results since then.

To address this, the new right-wing Finnish government’s program states that it will take measures to address the issue of faltering educational results and is promising a 200 million funding top-up for basic education so that it To ensure that students acquire basic skills. reading, writing and maths.

But money alone is not enough, according to the Finnish government, which now wants to target students’ mobile phones as well.

“The government will strengthen the powers of teachers and headmasters to intervene in activities that disrupt learning during school hours,” the government announced on Monday.


It added, “We will make the necessary legislative amendments to enable more efficient restrictions on matters such as the use of mobile devices during the school day so that boys and girls can better focus on learning.”

In Finland, the prominence of the mobile phone, which is closely linked to the success of Nokia, has long been undisputed. Children in the country are exposed to mobile phones at a younger age than their other counterparts, many of whom already have mobile phones when they enter school.

Despite concerns raised by teachers about the harmful effects of these devices on attention and concentration, current regulations set by the Finnish National Agency for Education do not give schools the right to ban students from bringing mobile devices onto their premises.

However, this position is set to change pending parliamentary approval.

It appears that Finnish decision makers have garnered significant public support, as evidenced by a recent citizens’ initiative, which has gathered over 30,000 signatures, calling for turning off mobile phones during lessons and breaks or leaving classrooms. It has been urged to implement measures such as completely banning

(Pekka Ventinen | EURACTIV.com)

Read more with EURACTIV

Source


Related News

Apple’s car is favored by consumers before it even exists – 26% would consider buying one from an iPhone maker – as firm hires former VP of Hyundai’s autonomous vehicle lab

Apple's non-existent self-driving car is already being adopted by consumers as a new survey shows that 26 percent of drivers would 'definitely consider'

The great paradox of the gas cap: why we have come out ahead despite having to pay more than ever

What we save on one side, we pay for on the other. The cap on gas has helped lower the price of a megawatt hour of energy, but the additional compensation to

AMD Ryzen 5 7600X Stock and 5.6 GHz OC CPU Benchmark Leaked Out, Equivalent to Core i9-12900K in Single-Threaded Test

More benchmarks of AMD's Ryzen 5 7600X CPUs in stock and overclocked configurations have leaked to Bilibili.

Google Drive: the steps to share a file as a link from the app

google drive It is one of the most feasible options to store and send any type of file, photos, videos, among others. This because the apps It features

More than 1,800 iOS and Android apps are leaking your data

The alarm is being raised by Symantec, a cyber security organization with which the private information of millions of people can be accessed through multiple

Physicists break down the speed of light with pulses inside hot plasma

Most of us are familiar with the prevailing law that limits how quickly information can travel through empty space: the speed of light, which tops out at