Kansas districts report fewer disruptions after limiting phones, curbing 1:1 take-home devices

Kansas State Board of Education · February 11, 2026

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Summary

Several districts told the board their local rules — from strict phone bans to replacing 1:1 take-home Chromebooks with classroom carts — corresponded with fewer disciplinary incidents, more in-school engagement and higher library use, though officials emphasized local tailoring and supports for families.

Two Kansas districts described outcomes after restricting student personal devices and rethinking one-to-one device programs during the State Board of Education’s Feb. 10 meeting.

McPherson Middle School recounted a multi-year sequence of changes that began with 'away-for-the-day' cell-phone restrictions (and subsequent limits on streaming and student-to-student email), then moved to replacing take-home Chromebooks with classroom carts. Principal Inga Espin and teacher Sarah Corcoran said the school saw fewer behavior incidents, a drop in suspensions linked to device-related bullying and higher use of after-school tutorials as students who need device access used school resources.

Beloit High School principal Casey Seifert described a no-phone policy backed by optional locking bags for phones and clear enforcement. After launch the school reported a dramatic reduction in phone incidents, shortened out-of-class and bathroom time, a surge in library checkouts and a tripling in the size of a reading class — all, Seifert said, signs of restored student-to-student interaction during the school day.

What district leaders told the board: administrators said teacher buy-in, clear parent communications and consistent enforcement were keys to success. Both districts emphasized that local context matters: policies were phased in with board and community conversations, orientation events and supports for families who asked how to contact students during the day.

Evidence and caveats: McPherson reported suspension declines tied to earlier phone restrictions and described a move to classroom Chromebook carts to lower teacher time spent managing monitoring software; Beloit offered book check-out and participation numbers and said phone referrals dropped to only a handful after the policy. Both superintendents cautioned that outcomes depend on local size and resources, and urged districts to consider what fits their communities.