With the new school year, D.C. students, teachers and guardians alike are entering a major transition: a ban on student cellphone use during the school day across District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) and public charter schools.
While many adults are ready for the change, students are bracing for a rocky adjustment.
โMost parents and educators, for the most part, are okay with this,โ said Dr. Jacque Patterson, president and at-large representative on the D.C. State Board of Education. โItโs the students who feel like they need their phones on a regular basis.โ
This shift mirrors a growing national trend.

In recent years, districts across at least a dozen states, including Florida, California, Texas, Minnesota, and Virginia, have adopted restrictions on student phone use. These policies are often framed as efforts to reduce classroom distractions, combat bullying, and address student mental health concerns.
Some schools have reported improved focus, while critics argue that such bans fail to address deeper issues like curriculum engagement, digital equity, and student-teacher trust.
In D.C., the ban comes as part of a broader effort by school leaders and city officials to reduce distractions and refocus students’ attention. However, the policy rollout has sparked questions about how it will be enforced, whether schools have the resources to manage it, and whether it addresses the underlying causes of student disengagement.
โ[Students] felt they used their phones for more than just social media,โ Patterson told The Informer. โThey felt that grown-ups couldnโt understand how they could be used as instructional tools.โ
The Board of Education president admits the transition may be bumpy.
โI think this is going to be an uneasy transition period for everybody, the teachers, the educators, the parents, and the students,โ he said. โThere will be some hiccups, but I think weโll get over those. And in the long run, studentsโ attention will be more turned toward school and not distracted by the potential distractions of a phone.โ
‘There’s So Much Value in How to Leverage Your Phone as a Tool to Get Ahead‘
For some students like Atrayu Lee, a rising senior at Thurgood Marshall Public Charter High School, the ban wonโt be a significant shift, as his current school already collects phones daily. However, he said his previous experience at Bard Early College High School, where students were allowed to keep their phones, helped shape his views.
โI feel like DCPS is banning phones because students arenโt paying attention,โ Atrayu told The Informer. โBut if the coursework were interesting, or we were being taught in a way that students want to pay attention to, I think the phones wouldnโt be a problem.โ
The soon-to-be 12th grader feels the phone is just a symptom.
โIf you look in the classrooms,โ he added, โthe teachers that students arenโt fond of, theyโll be on their phones more. But when itโs a teacher who teaches with passionโฆ students naturally pay more attention.โ
Brandon Best, Ward 6 representative on the State Board and one of the few who voted against the ban, is also concerned about the lack of cellphone usage in the classroom.

โWeโre moving toward a society where thereโs so much value in how to leverage your phone as a tool to get ahead,โ Best said. โAnd I just believe we arenโt setting the right examples by trying to eliminate something because we may have seen some hiccups.โ
Instead of banning phones outright, Best believes the district should have invested in professional development and support for teachers to learn how to use them meaningfully in instruction.
โOur school district hasnโt provided professional development or training on how to leverage cellphones to improve instruction,โ he told The Informer. โThat doesnโt make sense.โ
Both Best and Atrayu said that banning phones wonโt stop the behaviors administrators are trying to curb.
โThe students told us straight up that everything they do on their phones, they can do on their school laptops,โ Best said. โSo whatโs the real problem? Itโs not the tool, itโs the behavior.โ
Having been in an environment where phones are already confiscated, Atrayu confirmed that not much truly changes.
โIf you look at your phone, itโs basically a small computer. So even if we ban phones, students can still message each other from their computers,โ he said. โThe behavior doesnโt go away just because you take the phone.โ
Brace for Transition: ‘It’s Like They’re Stripping Away Contact‘
While Patterson supports the ban, he explained the logistical complications schools will face, particularly when it comes to enforcement and infrastructure.
โWeโre talking about thousands of phones now,โ he said. โI donโt think every single LEA [local education agency] has the bandwidth to safeguard those phones. If you lose a phone, youโre responsible for it. Most phones are very expensive, and the manpower just isnโt there in every school.โ

Best also raised concerns, noting the demands the policy places on under-resourced schools.
โLast time I checked, this was an unfunded mandate,โ he said. โSchools, especially smaller ones, donโt have the money or infrastructure to do what this ban requires, like installing phone lockers or hiring people to manage collection.โ
For students and families, the change brings not only logistical concerns but emotional ones, especially around communication and safety.
โPhones are communication. Thatโs what they were built for,โ Atrayu said. โAnd itโs like theyโre stripping away contact from parents, from anybody important. Sometimes you just need to contact your parents. The main office can be inconsistent and not swift enough.โ
At a youth concert event held at Stanton Recreation Center in Ward 8, as a loud band played in the background, Cleopatra Green-Clarke, a parent and teacherโs assistant at The Childrenโs Guild DC Public Charter School, stood with her two children and voiced her concern and neutral stance.
โThe school my kids go to already uses the Yondr pouches, so theyโre already accustomed to not having their phones on them at all times. But for them to be completely taken away, I donโt know how I feel about that,โ she told The Informer. โI work at a school too, and we collect the kidsโ phones. It helps with attention, because if theyโre on their phones while weโre teaching, theyโre distracted. I get it. However, I donโt think they should be completely locked away. If thereโs an emergency, I canโt get to my kids. I have to wait for a staff member or administrator to call me and let me know something happened. So, a full phone ban? Iโm not with that. But I understand.”
Despite concerns about contact, Patterson said schools will be required to develop emergency communication procedures.
โWe want to reassure parents that in the case of an emergency, the school will have procedures to contact them in a timely manner,โ he said.
Green-Clarkeโs daughter, Heaven Woodson, a rising senior at Paul Public Charter School, said her school already has a phone policy in place and she said many of her peers are none too pleased.
โHonestly,โ she said, โ[the response has] been negative.โ
Heaven feels that a ban is not necessary for all students.
โI support it for kids who canโt concentrate without their phones,โ Heaven told The Informer. โBut I know me and some other kids can, so it feels kind of unfair for people who havenโt really done anything. But it is what it is.โ
Students Feel Ignored: ‘If We Want Real Change, We Have to Meet Students Where They Are‘
For many students, what concerns them most is the sense that adults are out of touch with how integral phones are to student life, not just socially, but educationally and emotionally.
Atrayu worries that decision-makers ignored the voices of those most affected.
โWe had the agricultural revolution, the industrial revolution, now itโs the next revolution,โ he said. โTo forcefully ban phones, something so crucial to a teenagerโs life, just because you think itโll make them more engaged, itโs just not true. And itโs not worth the drama.โ
The rising senior believes there is a better solution, one rooted in listening, not restricting. Rather than enforcing a top-down policy, he said school leaders should have worked with students to understand why phones are being used in the first place.

โThe better solution wouldโve been to use the summertime to host meetings, workshops, and roundups. Bring DCPS students in and ask: โWhy arenโt you engaged?โโ Atrayu said. โBut instead, they enforced a rule with no input from any DCPS student. If DCPS genuinely cared, there wouldโve been some sort of space where theyโre directly contacting the students on a large scale.โ
Best emphasized that unless schools confront deeper issues of engagement and trust, the long-term impact of the ban will fall short.
โThese phones arenโt going away,โ he said. โWhen students go off to college or enter the workforce, theyโll still need to know how to manage them. Weโre missing the opportunity to teach discipline and responsibility by simply removing the tool.โ
For Best, real progress means more than restriction.
โIf we want real change, we have to meet students where they are,โ he said, โnot just take away the tools theyโve grown up using.โ

