Phone policies are easy to write. Harder to enforce.
screenfree helps Singapore schools turn phone rules into a simple daily routine with lockable, signal-blocking pouches students keep with them.
Most schools do not have a policy problem. They have an enforcement problem.
Bags, blazers, pockets and lockers leave too much grey area. Teachers end up policing instead of teaching. The policy holds in Period 1 and slips by recess.
The gap is the daily routine.
screenfree closes the gap between what the policy says and what happens at 10:15am on a Tuesday.
Read more about making a school phone policy workableThree steps. Same routine every day.
No apps. No dashboards. No central phone storage. No daily confiscation routine.
Insert
Phone and smartwatch, if required, go into the pouch at the start of the day, class or activity.
Lock
The magnetic lock closes. The pouch stays with the student, but the device is out of use.
Unlock
Students tap the pouch on a managed unlocking point at the end of the day, lesson or session.
See the pouch routine in action.
Phone in. Pouch locked. Unlock at the managed point. Simple enough for daily use by staff and students.
The goal is not to add another system for staff to manage. It is to make the phone routine visible, repeatable and easy to explain.
A locked phone is not always a disconnected phone.
A standard pouch stops students seeing or using the screen. A signal-blocking pouch goes further by blocking mobile data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS while the phone is inside.
Built around Singapore school routines.
screenfree is designed for the messy parts of the school day, not just the easy parts. It can support routines across lessons, recess, CCAs, supplementary sessions, remedial periods and school events.
No new software to manage.
No app for students. No dashboard for staff. No extra IT system. The pouch is physical, visible and simple to explain.
Students keep their phones with them.
The device stays with the student, but access is controlled. That means fewer storage logistics, fewer queues and less daily handling for staff.
Start with a sample, not a rollout.
You do not need to roll out school-wide on day one. Start with a sample pack or a small targeted trial. Test the routine with staff, pressure-test the student flow and decide from there.
What a sample pack helps answer
How does the lock feel? How quickly can students unlock? Should you use standard or signal-blocking pouches? Where would the unlocking points sit? A sample makes those questions practical.
Request a Singapore sample packTwo minutes is enough.
Tell us your school. We will send a sample pack or answer a question. No pitch, no pressure.
