Without a smartphone, modern life would be, to say the least, challenging
Without a smartphone, modern life would be, to say the least, challenging. Woven into the fabric of society, you canât walk down the street without seeing noses in phones every few yards, pouring the power of the digital age into our purses and pockets.
But mobile connectivity has as many critics as it does advocates, and the government are now holding a consultation on blanket banning phones from Britainâs schools. Here are some of the arguments for and against the absolute ubiquitousness of the smartphoneâŠ
Mobile phones are brilliant
Itâs hard to know why we discuss âbeing on our phonesâ as though itâs a singular activity. Modern phone users can learn languages for free, follow current affairs on a host of phone-friendly platforms, and manage their finances at the click of a button â as well as notching a high score in Snake.

Mini-laptops that entertain, educate and organise, the moral panic about âscreensâ is lost on a generation that uses their phones for job applications, and as primary social resources. Talking with friends is no less meaningful for being digital, and phone usage joins playing online video games in the category, âmuch more sociable than it looksâ.

At the end of the day, it doesnât really matter, because the smartphone plays an inescapable role in society, whether we like it or not, and being proficient with its various foibles is an essential life skill. Instead of policing your friends and familyâs phone usage, spend a day introducing grandma to mobile banking. Then weâll see who spends too much time on their phone.

âŠBut itâs quantity over quality
Fundamentally, most of your phoneâs flaws come back to one thing: They distract you. Whether itâs uploading photos of your food, snapping obsessively on holiday, or gabbing with five friends instead of focusing on one, on your phone, the world is at your fingertips, so you stop fully engaging with your own.
If youâre too rubbish at living in the moment, phones can become actively dangerous. You shouldnât use your phone while crossing the road; you shouldnât use your phone while cooking; and you definitely shouldnât use your phone behind the wheel. You shouldnât, but many still do.

Accidents are not the only health risks. A whole host of studies have linked over-use of mobile phones to increased anxiety and feelings of low self-esteem, while the bright backlight is known to hurt quality and ease of sleep. A 2014 study also suggested that mere presence of a smartphone is enough to negatively impact concentration.
And although there are many things you could do on your phone, thatâs not the same as what you do do. Seemingly tailored to short attention spans, much of our screen time is spent doom-scrolling on Twitter, having our mental health ruined by Instagram, or playing rubbish mobile games we wouldnât look twice at if they came out on console.

Phones are quantity over quality; they do almost everything, but badly. You can read messages, but not someoneâs body language; you can play Plants Vs Zombies, but not Far Cry 6; you can swipe right on someoneâs photo, but thereâs no way of knowing if you actually like them.
Whether banning mobile phones at schools will make a difference to kidsâ behaviour is anyoneâs guess, but it might well cause less distraction.








