Win Elements

Win Elements LLC

Honest conversations about what actually works in education — and what only looks like it does. The Win Elements Podcast centers on phone-free schools, where today's hardest questions converge: engagement, teacher burnout, equity, academic integrity, and what a diploma even means anymore. Built on the work of teacher and founder John Nguyen, each episode says the quiet part out loud and points to real solutions — grounded in data and real classrooms. For educators, parents, and leaders who want the truth, not the talking points.

Episodes

  1. Jun 17

    Ep- 10: The Ghost Students: Why Taking Phones Away Makes Kids Show Up More

    Common sense says it plainly: confiscate a teenager's phone and they'll rebel — or just stop coming to school. It feels airtight. If a kid hates math but loves texting, take the texting away and they'll stay home. So why does the data show the exact opposite? In this episode of The Win Elements Podcast, we dig into a finding that sounds like a typo in the research: bell-to-bell phone bans actually increase attendance. We start with the survival math no administrator can ignore — average daily attendance drives roughly 45% of a district's budget, so every empty desk is a budget cut waiting to happen. Then we unpack the rigorous 2025 Florida study (Figlio & Özek) that found a 5–10% drop in unexcused absences after a bell-to-bell ban, concentrated in the middle and high schoolers everyone worries about most — plus the telling detail that fewer students transferred out. Why would removing a teenager's favorite possession make them want to be in the building? Because the phone was never the reason they came — it was the tool that let them disengage while sitting right there. We get into the psychology of the "ghost student," the surprising power of reverse FOMO, and how social life snaps back into hallways and classrooms once the screens go dark. We also follow the money: with families fleeing to charters for calmer, more focused environments — 75% of district leaders name school choice a top enrollment driver — a phone-free building becomes a genuine life raft. And we stay honest about the catch: a 2026 analysis of 40,000+ schools found little effect on average, because enforcement method is everything. Half-measures that turn teachers into phone police don't just fail — they make things worse. Finally, we get practical: how schools make bell-to-bell stick without burning out staff, using a structural tool — the Safe Pouch — that takes willpower out of the equation for students and nagging out of the equation for teachers, with a built-in emergency path for staff. The reframe at the heart of it: phones aren't what keep kids in school. They're the escape hatch that lets kids be absent while sitting right in front of us. Learn more: https://www.winelements.com/contact Topics: school phone bans, average daily attendance, ADA, chronic absenteeism, student engagement, school funding, charter schools, school choice, reverse FOMO, phone-free schools, school leadership.

  2. Jun 16

    Ep 9 - Gamified School Violence: What Phones Did to the Schoolyard Fight

    A schoolyard fight used to be a spontaneous, localized thing — two angry kids, a few minutes, over. The smartphone changed what a fight is. The moment a camera can broadcast it live to the whole school and the entire internet, the fight becomes a performance — content, made for an audience, fought for clout. Researchers have a chilling name for it: the "audience effect." And it means phones don't just distract from learning. They actively manufacture a reason to fight. In this episode of The Win Elements Podcast, we move past the tired "kids these days" debate and go straight to the data — a survey of roughly 8,000 principals, district-level numbers from North Adams, Massachusetts, the landmark Florida study, and a national analysis of about 4,600 schools. The throughline is uncomfortable and clear: schools are choosing between three paths, and only one of them actually works. The first path is doing nothing. The second is writing a policy — the "keep it in your pocket" rule on page 40 of the handbook. We explain why that's a speed limit sign in a hallway full of teenagers: it announces a rule but physically stops nothing, and it collapses under what we call the "two-second rule" and the finite willpower of an exhausted teacher in May. The third path — physically securing the device so it's genuinely unavailable — is where the real numbers live: about two-thirds of principals reporting fewer recorded fights, a 75% drop in discipline referrals in one district, in-class phone use collapsing from 61% to 13%, and measurable gains in attendance. We're honest about the nuance, too — the gains are slower and more uneven in the largest study, and one district saw suspensions spike before settling. But the deciding variable across every dataset isn't how strict the policy sounds on the morning announcements. It's whether the phone is genuinely, physically unavailable. We close on a bigger question. We've spent a century trying to discipline students into paying attention with rulebooks and detentions. What if the answer was never better enforcement — but engineering an environment where focus is simply the path of least resistance? Learn more: https://www.winelements.com/contact Topics: school cellphone bans, phone pouches, school violence, the audience effect, discipline referrals, student behavior, school climate, attendance, teacher burnout, school leadership.

    Ep 9 - Gamified School Violence: What Phones Did to the Schoolyard Fight
  3. Jun 13

    Ep 8- AI Is Quietly Making the Diploma Worthless — and the Gap Wider

    A student turns in a flawless essay. Perfect structure, clean argument, passing grade. The grade book records mastery. There's just one problem: the student can't actually do any of it. The AI did. And when that same student sits down for a test with no phone and no chatbot — just a pencil and their own mind — the illusion collapses. That's the quiet crisis at the center of this episode of The Win Elements Podcast. Graduation rates are near a record 87% and the class of 2025 was the largest in U.S. history — yet the class of 2024 posted some of the lowest reading and math scores ever recorded. We explain how AI is manufacturing that paradox: producing "phantom proficiency" that inflates grades while real skill quietly drains away, turning the diploma from a certificate of capability into what amounts to a receipt of attendance. Then we get to the part nobody wants to say out loud. AI isn't a great equalizer — it's an inequality engine. We break down the twofold trap: unequal access (wealthier families and schools buy better tools and the time to learn to use them well) and a structural "rich-get-richer" effect, where AI tutoring amplifies whatever knowledge a student already walks in with. The student who knows enough to prompt well and catch a wrong answer gets a brilliant tutor. The student who types "do my homework" and copies the output gets nothing real. The likely result: AI raises everyone's outcomes on paper while raising the privileged student's faster — so the floor lifts a few inches and the ceiling blasts into the stratosphere. We don't just admire the problem. We close on what a school can actually control by tomorrow morning — and why protecting focused learning time is one of the few interventions that closes the gap instead of widening it. The final question we leave you with: when these graduates hit a workforce that can't be fooled by a polished AI essay, will employers stop trusting the diploma altogether? Learn more: https://www.winelements.com/contact Topics: AI in education, learning inequity, the achievement gap, illusion of competence, NAEP 2024 scores, graduation rates, equity in schools, school leadership, MTSS, PBIS.

    Ep 8- AI Is Quietly Making the Diploma Worthless — and the Gap Wider
  4. Jun 13

    Ep 7- The $8 Billion Education Mirage Nobody Audits

    Every dollar in a school budget has two prices: the sticker price the board approves, and the impact price — what it actually changes in a classroom. This episode of The Win Elements Podcast audits the gap between them, and what we found should worry every district leader. The 50 largest U.S. school districts pour at least $8 billion a year into teacher professional development — roughly $18,000 per teacher and 19 school days pulled from instruction. TNTP's landmark study, The Mirage, found no reliable evidence any of it consistently improves teaching. Only about 3 in 10 teachers improved; nearly 2 in 10 got worse. We trace the same pattern through post-pandemic spending: $4,000-per-student high-dosage tutoring with sobering results, and "24/7" online tutoring that only the most vulnerable students never log into — paying for the illusion of access instead of impact. Then the pivot. Peer-reviewed research (Beland & Murphy; Abrahamsson, Norwegian School of Economics) shows that creating phone-free learning time recovers the equivalent of five instructional days a year — and the gains land hardest on the lowest-achieving, lowest-income students, making it one of the few interventions that narrows the gap instead of widening it. We close on the structural fix: how the Safe Pouch — a mechanical lock released by a magnet of the correct strength and pattern, built by a working teacher — delivers phone-free time as a flat one-time purchase, with no subscriptions, no unlocking bottlenecks, and funding pathways through Title I, Title IV-A, MTSS/PBIS, Perkins/CTE, and state grants. Audit your own ledger. What did it cost — and how many students did it measurably change? Learn more or get a quote: https://www.winelements.com/contact Topics: education budget waste, professional development ROI, high-dosage tutoring, phone-free schools, cell phone bans, student achievement gap, MTSS, PBIS, school improvement, Title I funding.

  5. Jun 13

    Ep 6- Cell Phones in Schools Are Quietly Bankrupting Admin and Teachers' Energy

    Ending the School Cell Phone Enforcement Tax What if your school's cell phone policy is quietly costing teachers a second full-time job? In this episode, John opens the "shadow ledger" of K-12 education — the hidden labor cost of phones in the classroom that no one writes down, but every educator pays. We unpack new national data from Pew Research (2024), the NCES School Pulse Panel (2025), and the largest study of school phone restriction programs to date — the NBER 2026 report on roughly 4,600 schools — to answer the question every principal, superintendent, and classroom teacher is asking: why do written cell phone bans in schools keep failing in real classrooms? You'll hear: Why 72% of high school teachers call phone distraction a major problem — and why 60% say the policies on the books are unenforceableHow students log a median of 43 fragmented minutes of phone use per school day, and what that does to teacher burnout, attention, and classroom managementThe peer-reviewed economics: how removing phone distraction returned roughly one extra hour of instruction per week — five full instructional days per year (Beland & Murphy, Labor Economics, 2016)The honest limitations from the NBER data — why immediate test-score jumps are mixed and why consistency over multiple years is the real leverHow the Safe Pouch® — a mechanical lock released by a magnet with sufficient strength and the correct pattern, invented by a practicing public school teacher — turns enforcement from a willpower problem into a structural feature of the school environmentHow the Home / Teacher / Admin lock tiers map onto MTSS and PBIS, displace conflict away from the classroom, and pull parents into the system at homeSustainable funding: Title I, Title IV-A, MTSS/PBIS, Perkins/CTE, community sponsorships, and the PouchBook family-reimbursement model — backed by a three-year repair warranty that covers student abuseIf you're a school administrator, principal, district leader, teacher, or parent trying to fix cell phone distraction in schools without burning out your staff, this episode is for you. Learn more, request a sample, or watch free on-demand training videos at winelements.com. Win Elements LLC · U.S. Patent No. 10,980,324 · TIPS-Awarded Sole-Source Vendor · Invented by a Public School Teacher to Empower Educators.

  6. Jun 12

    Ep 5- Are School Phone Bans Really About Discipline? The Research Says No.

    Are Cell Phone Bans in Schools Really About Discipline? The Research Says No. Most people think school phone policies are about classroom management, student compliance, and reducing distractions. But what if phone-free schools are actually one of the most powerful educational equity tools available today? In this episode of the Win Elements Podcast, we explore the research-backed case for rethinking cell phone bans in schools. Instead of viewing phone management as punishment or control, this conversation shows how structured phone-free environments can support student achievement, mental health, school safety, and long-term educational equity. We examine research from the United Kingdom, Norway, Brown University, and Johns Hopkins University to explain why students who are struggling academically often benefit the most when smartphones are removed from the learning environment. In This Episode, We Cover: Why phone-free schools can improve student focus and academic performanceHow cell phone bans may reduce educational inequalityWhy low-performing students benefit most from phone-free classroomsThe connection between smartphones, student mental health, and bullyingWhy opt-in support systems often fail vulnerable studentsHow MTSS and PBIS frameworks connect to early warning systemsWhy school phone policies should focus on support, not punishmentHow Safe Pouch helps schools create safer, more focused learning environmentsWhy This Matters For school leaders, educators, parents, counselors, and school board members, the conversation around cell phones in schools is no longer just about distraction. It is about equity, access, mental health, and giving every student a fair opportunity to learn. The episode also highlights the Safe Pouch system from Win Elements, created by public school educator John Nguyen. Safe Pouch is designed to support phone-free schools through a practical, sustainable, and equity-centered approach. Learn more about Win Elements here: Visit Win Elements Read the full related article here: Safe Pouch Is an Equity Tool, Not Just a Phone Policy Recommended For: SuperintendentsPrincipalsTeachersSchool board membersParentsSchool counselorsMTSS and PBIS teamsEducation researchersStudent support teamsSEO Keywords cell phone bans in schools, phone-free schools, school phone policy, student mental health, educational equity, Safe Pouch, Win Elements, MTSS, PBIS, student achievement, classroom management, smartphone addiction, school safety, student engagement, bullying prevention, K-12 education, school leadership, digital distraction, phone pouches for schools YouTube Hashtags #CellPhoneBan #PhoneFreeSchools #SafePouch #WinElements #StudentMentalHealth #EducationalEquity #PBIS #MTSS #SchoolLeadership #EducationPodcast #ClassroomManagement #StudentAchievement #SchoolSafety #K12Education #DigitalDistraction Suggested YouTube Title Phone-Free Schools: Why Cell Phone Bans Are Really an Equity Tool ```

    Ep 5- Are School Phone Bans Really About Discipline? The Research Says No.
  7. Jun 7

    Ep 2 -What Does a Diploma Even Mean Anymore? The Cheating Problem School

    Most principals already know phone-enabled cheating is happening in their building. That's the uncomfortable part. It's not a secret — teachers see it, students know it, and the signs are everywhere: grades that outpace mastery, passing rates that outpace real engagement. So why does it so often go unaddressed? After years in the classroom, I've come to believe the honest answer isn't a failure of character. It's a structure that quietly rewards looking away. Enforce a phone policy strictly and you invite three things: a flood of parent complaints, a discipline office buried in daily incidents, and — the hardest one — the real possibility that your building's metrics get worse before they get better, as cheating that was inflating those numbers finally surfaces. Think about what that means. The principal who does the harder, more honest thing may watch their graduation rate or AP participation dip, and pay a professional price for it. The structure rewards the appearance of success over the harder work of surfacing what's real. I want to be clear: this isn't an attack on principals. Most are dedicated educators working under conditions that produce this pattern reliably — and most are frustrated by the gap between what they wish they could do and what their context allows. But naming the pattern matters. Because the teachers absorbing the cost, and the honest students competing against device-enabled dishonesty, are counting on someone being willing to say it out loud. I wrote about this in full — the three pressures, the real costs, and what honest leadership looks like instead: 👉 https://www.winelements.com/post/the-school-administrator-s-quiet-compromise-how-principals-weak-phone-policies-protect-metrics-by If you're a school leader who's felt this tension, I'd genuinely like to hear how you see it. #SchoolLeadership #PhonesInSchools #AcademicIntegrity #K12Education #EdLeadership

    Ep 2 -What Does a Diploma Even Mean Anymore? The Cheating Problem School

About

Honest conversations about what actually works in education — and what only looks like it does. The Win Elements Podcast centers on phone-free schools, where today's hardest questions converge: engagement, teacher burnout, equity, academic integrity, and what a diploma even means anymore. Built on the work of teacher and founder John Nguyen, each episode says the quiet part out loud and points to real solutions — grounded in data and real classrooms. For educators, parents, and leaders who want the truth, not the talking points.