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Minister Foley Minister Foley welcomes support from major mobile phone operators for voluntary agreements to keep childhood smartphone free

From Department of Education 

Published on 22 May 2024

Last updated on 22 May 2024

Minister for Education Norma Foley has welcomed the decision of the country’s leading mobile phone operators to support her plan for voluntary agreements to keep childhood smartphone free.

Vodafone, Three, eir, Tesco Mobile, Virgin Media and An Post Mobile have all confirmed that they support the ‘Keeping Childhood Smartphone Free’ guide for parents and parents’ associations of primary school age children

These guidelines provide advice for the setting up of voluntary agreements between parents to avoid buying smartphones for their children while in primary school.

Minister Foley said:

“At my recent social media summit, I asked the companies invited to show leadership in terms of protecting our children online. They gave me a commitment that they would reflect on this and I am delighted that six mobile operators have now confirmed their support for the voluntary agreements.”

These operators account for more than 95 per cent of the Irish mobile phone market.

There has been a strong take-up of the voluntary agreements by parents and parents’ associations, with examples in counties such as Clare, Dublin, Wicklow and Waterford.

Minister Foley said:

“I believe that the strong endorsement from these major mobile phone operators for this policy will lead to even more voluntary agreements being adopted to ‘Keep Childhood Smartphone Free’.”

Parents associations have carried out school surveys, produced research and held public meetings. Schools have erected posters on their school grounds with slogans such as ‘Smartphone-free voluntary code’.

The key purpose of these voluntary agreements has been to reduce the peer pressure on pupils and parents in relation to buying or using smartphones and social media apps while they are in primary school.

Minister Foley said:

“I am very encouraged by the positive response by parents and parents associations and I would like to commend them for all the work they have put in. We know that smartphone use can expose children to risks such as cyberbullying, harmful content and online grooming. It is all about delaying, not denying forever, the purchase of a smartphone, until our young people are better placed to deal with these risks.”

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