Education Dept Bans Cellphones In Schools

1 min read

New guidelines ‘to ensure discipline and transparency’

RAWALPINDI: The Punjab School Education Department has introduced guidelines to ensure discipline and transparency in government schools.

District and tehsil education officers and school heads have been instructed to enforce these measures strictly. According to a circular issued by the department, the use of mobile phones during teaching hours has been banned for teachers, students, and non-teaching staff. Teachers are required to keep their phones on silent mode and hand them over to the head teacher during school hours.

The guidelines also emphasise professional appearance and orderliness. Teaching and non-teaching staff are required to dress formally, with teachers mandated to wear dress coats and closed shoes.

Students must wear name tags and uniform navy-blue jerseys, while class representatives will don CR sashes. A system of rotating head boys has been proposed to ensure all students have an opportunity to lead.

Schools are required to install soft boards displaying schedules, discipline charts, and general notices. Additionally, time boards must be placed at the main gates, and banners with motivational slogans should be prominently displayed.

The circular calls for organised record-keeping, with all documents uniformly covered. Students must use separate, covered registers for English, Urdu, Science, and Mathematics, replacing traditional notebooks.

Teachers are instructed to maintain diaries to record daily lessons. Classroom standards have also been set. The date, attendance details, and subject highlights must be written on whiteboards daily, alongside the day’s topic and key points.

Students’ uniforms, haircuts, and nails will be checked regularly to maintain hygiene and discipline. The department aims to create a structured, uniform environment to enhance the educational experience for students and uphold discipline across all schools.

News published in the Express Tribune on 2nd December 2024

Previous Story

Less Than 5% Of Deaf Children Attend School

Next Story

Child Abuse At Work

Latest from Blog

Protecting Children from Grooming and Abuse

This video contains a discussion of abuse, including predatory and abusive behavior towards children. TEDx events are independently organized by volunteers.  Abuse often begins not with obvious harm, but with trust, praise, and attention that slowly become grooming. In this powerful talk, Amy Saltzman, M.D., a former competitive gymnast, physician,…

Are Teens in Pakistan Safe on Discord and Reddit?

Some of the riskiest teen online spaces aren’t the ones parents check. Discord and Reddit work very differently from apps like Instagram or TikTok. Discord lets users join servers and private groups with little identity verification, while anonymity is a default on Reddit, making both harder for parents to track.…

Man Booked For Rape, Blackmail Of Minor Girl In Bahawalpur

BAHAWALPUR: Dhanote police in Lodhran district registered a case against a man for raping a minor girl and blackmailing her with objectionable videos. According to police, the FIR against the suspect was registered on the complaint of the victim’s mother. According to the complainant, her victim’s daughter had gone to…

Caged in Care

The May 2026 NCHR investigative report, “Caged in Care,” exposes systemic human rights abuses and medical malpractice within private, unregulated rehabilitation centers across Pakistan, which frequently operate as profit-driven custodial spaces rather than genuine therapeutic facilities. The investigation reveals that these centers are heavily weaponized as instruments of patriarchal control…

Boy Killed In Wana Mosque In Lower South Waziristan

SOUTH WAZIRISTAN: A nine-year-old boy was killed inside a mosque in the Zeri Noor area of Wana tehsil in Lower South Waziristan district, police said on 4 July. They said the deceased, identified as Waqas, belonged to the Wazir Mughalkhel tribe. Police officials said the child was allegedly murdered inside…
Go toTop