+100 |
Whatever they came up with you still wouldn’t want to apply to your kid. |
An effecive way to sterilize your boys. |
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I support no phone use in middle schools, but this pouch stuff is dumb. My 13yo is in general a rule follower and does not use their phone during school (I know because I check their usage). My plan is to have them leave their phone at home and have their Apple Watch on school mode to turn off as soon as school ends. If they need me in an emergency they can turn off school mode and contact me. If we need to communicate about after school plans/rides/frequent bus delays I will text and they will get it as school mode turns off, and they will text on the watch after school.
I think this goes along with the school’s ultimate goal of no phones at school but leaves needed communication open. |
:roll: :lol: |
If more parents choose to have their kids leave the phone at home to not have to pouch it, that’s great. A watch is not nearly as distracting as the phone because they can’t do tiktok/snap/games on it or just endlessly scroll. I have zero issue with Apple Watch use in my classes and wouldn’t mind a quick text here and there at all. However, most kids and families aren’t just going to move to leaving phones at home by choice so if the pouch encourages that and we can eventually move to your phone is only locked in the pouch if you in particular continue to have issues with it, that’s a perfectly good system IMO. (Though I think making it a requirement for the PARENT to come get the phone out of the pouch if it gets to that point would be the true deterrent.) |
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Honestly question- if your kid has the pouch in her backpack and leaves the phone in the backpack all day (not in the pouch) following the rules. How is the teacher going to know whether or not it is in the pouch?
My kid is a rule follower to the point of annoyance so she may not do this. AAP kid, got awards for following the rules. I only say this because I do believe my kid keeps her “phone (only on Wi-if not cell service) in her backpack. BUT as a parent I am pretty comfortable telling her to do this because she can access it in case of some awful emergency. It will be on her if she doesn’t follow the rule and takes it out, but since it was an away for the day school, she knew that already. |
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This pouch seems superior- why don’t they use it instead?
https://www.winelements.com/post/yondr-vs-multi-tiered-safe-pouch |
If it’s in the backpack all day but not specifically in the pouch, ok. But real talk, if they could keep it in their backpack all day and not use it during class , we wouldn’t be at the point of needing pouches. It sounds so simple but it’s not - they cannot manage it that way. |
| To add, I’ve seen at other schools where the pouches are used that the pouches are in the individual classrooms so each kid locks theirs in the pouch IN THAT CLASS, meaning in a true emergency (like a school shooting, not wanting to leave after the SOLs) they still could get it out. This also means it’s never in a central location away from them. It’s technically always with them, just not usable. This is very doable. At the end of class, you pop it out and go. But you can’t just subconsciously grab it out of your hoodie all class or have it going off on your desk where you can see and not help looking at it. |
This pouch allows emergency calls and you just have to cut a thread for emergency access https://www.winelements.com/post/yondr-vs-multi-tiered-safe-pouch |
Can you please quickly run for school board as yours is the logic missing |
| Cannot imagine how gross these pouches will be after 1 quarter let alone 1 year |
Uhhh no more gross than EVERY OTHER thing in the room that’s used daily in a public school. This is a serious reach lmao |
To political for my taste. They could just hire me to design an actual pilot program, but we all know they don’t actually want that. They made up their minds, they need their Yondr kickbacks (allegedly). |