Coronado Unified board approves pilot smart-device restrictions at middle school, delays wider pouch purchase
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Summary
After months of community input, the board voted to pilot a device-restriction program at Coronado Middle School and tighten rules at other sites, delaying a districtwide purchase of secure pouches pending pilot data and further staff recommendations.
The Coronado Unified School District governing board voted to adopt a phased smart-device protocol on April 16, approving a pilot at Coronado Middle School and narrower restrictions at Coronado High School rather than an immediate, systemwide pouch rollout.
The board’s decision followed a 16-month study and public forums. Superintendent Mueller told trustees staff proposed two paths: option B, a more prescriptive pouch/lockable-bag model at middle and high schools, and option C, a pilot at the middle school with tighter in-class restrictions at the high school (devices allowed at lunch/break or when leaving campus). "Staff is prepared to execute the will of the board and the direction provided this evening," Mueller said, urging measured implementation and data collection.
Trustees debated enforcement, student connectivity needs and costs. Supporters cited academic and mental-health research suggesting restrictive device policies can improve focus and reduce cyberbullying; one trustee referenced recent jury findings against social-media companies as evidence of the platforms’ harms. Opponents warned mechanical solutions can be defeated, recommended piloting first, and pushed for clearer enforcement plans and data metrics before committing district funds.
Board members discussed estimated costs for a broad pouch purchase versus lower-cost lockbox alternatives and the difficulty of measuring infractions without overburdening teachers. Several trustees favored starting with a pilot to gather teacher, parent and student survey data plus referral statistics; staff agreed to provide quarterly updates on implementation and outcomes.
The motion to approve option C — piloting pouches/secure bags at the middle school while tightening protocols at elementary sites and maintaining a modified approach at the high school — passed after a recorded voice vote by trustees.
The district directed staff to return with implementation details, enforcement plans, and data collection protocols so the board can reassess whether to expand the program at CHS. "We can always pull back or increase a policy," Mueller said. The pilot timeline and specific procurement decisions (including any future pouch purchase) will be informed by the pilot’s results and subsequent board direction.
