If thereâs one thing that teachers and students can all agree on, itâs that phones in the classroom are a distraction.
âOnce you get a notification, your focus switches completely from what youâre supposed to be learning,â says Evan Conroy (18), a sixth-year pupil at St Josephâs, Fairview, north Dublin. âYouâre worried more about what the notification says on your phone than learning.â
Jean-Marie Ward, deputy principal of Malahide Community College, agrees that phones can negatively impact the learning environment. âThereâs not a school in the country that would say otherwise,â she says.
And yet, the announcement in Budget 2025 that â¬9 million is to be provided to fund efforts to keep students off their phones during the school day â specifically, the provision of secure pouches to store the devices in â has been met with controversy.
Some schools in Ireland have already rolled out the use of such pouches.
Critics of the Governmentâs decision to invest millions in the system that locks away phones say that the money could be better spent elsewhere.
David Waters, president of the Teacherâs Union of Ireland, described the announcement as âfrustrating in the extremeâ. Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald wrote to Taoiseach Simon Harris this week insisting on the âimmediate withdrawalâ of the decision.
Jackie Dempsey, principal of Loreto on the Green in Dublinâs city centre, said that the investment was an âobscene waste of moneyâ.
St Josephâs Fairview already has a ârobustâ phone policy, according to principal Ciara McDonnell. âWe currently have a number of different initiatives running, like phone-free Friday â thatâs [when] both staff and students leave phones at home or off their person.â
Such initiatives have had various positive impacts on the learning environment at St Josephâs.
Even with established phone policies, staff at St Josephâs are supportive of the Governmentâs plans for phone pouches â while also acknowledging that a national rollout might suffer some teething problems.
âWeâd really welcome this,â says Alexandra Duane, deputy principal at St Josephâs. âI think itâs been acknowledged that [phone use] is an issue, and now theyâre going to try and do something about it.â
At Alexandra College, in Milltown, south Dublin, smartphone pouches have instigated a âdifferent cultureâ since introduction in September 2023, says principal Barbara Ennis.
âI donât think itâs money badly spent. I think itâs generally good for the mental health of young people,â she says.
Ms Ward, at Malahide Community College, is similarly positive about the impact the pouches have had at their school since introducing them in January. Student welfare â giving students a break from their phones â was part of the schoolâs reasoning for introducing the pouches, and pupils have bought into the initiative, she says.
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Allowing schools the autonomy to choose how to use funding might be a better approach, Ms Ward adds.
Students at St Josephâs are unsure about the pouches â itâs a lot of money, money that could be spent on music or sport equipment or new technology.