I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a parent go to such great lengths to make their kid sound powerless and incompetent. It’s almost impressive? |
To paraphrase a great mind: you[u][i] can move, too. |
This. Put the responsibility where it belongs, folks. |
OP - kid forgot pouch at home today. That said, they are a rule follower so I'm confident it will be fine. |
Its the other kids parents. I agree though. The punishment for using a phone in class should be the parents must come to school in person at end of week to pick it up. That will motivate parents to discipline their kids to not use phones in class. |
Am I supposed to somehow monitor my kid speaking out of turn in class, too? I'm very confident that kids will break rules or not follow parents' instructions when not in their presence; and that most kids are probably told by their parents not to use their phones in class. Just like breaking any other rule, I expect my kid to receive discipline/correction at school for infractions at school when they happen. If it warrants parental notification, then I'll deal with that at home as a parent. Lots of parents have rules about clothing .... which some kids then don't follow while at school. That's somehow the parent's fault? |
The whole reason why we have Yonder bags are parents like you, who don’t take responsibility for your child’s behavior. The rule is now to keep phones in a poach; just like the rule that you can’t wear a bikini to school. If you are abdicating your responsibilities to parent them while at school, the school can set the rules. Here’s a new one. |
You bought their clothes, and you bought their phone. So it's your responsibility on what they should possess of these in the end. If your kid can't manage simple things like shutting their mouth or sitting still in class on a daily basis, perhaps they shouldn't be there because those are as much a distraction as the phone. Stop making excuses. |
So do you. My kid can keep off their phone without putting it in a pouch. |
Are you even real? First of all, it's "pouch" not "poach." Second of all, you are so illogical and you know nothing about me as a parent. "Abdicating (my) responsibilities to parent them while at school" --- my responsibility as a parent to my kid at school is to support the school's rules and discipline and authority. The only way parents can NOT "abdicate" parenting responsibilities while their kids are in school is to shadow them around all day. Of COURSE schools set the rules. And I'm fine with the pouch pilot program. I was fine with the "away for the day" attempt but it didn't work because SCHOOLS abdicated THEIR responsibility to ENFORCE their OWN rules. My kids are sent to school by me with the school's rules and my expectation that they will follow them. That's my parental responsibility. What they choose to do once they are there is on them and they suffer the consequences. That's my parental responsibility. So sorry (not) that you are so inconvenienced and disturbed by a phone pouch. |
Please explain how YOU are fulfilling your parental responsibilities while your child is at school. My kid doesn't speak out of turn or fidget distractingly in class on an irregular basis, let alone daily. I'm sure your kid is a perfect angel, too, because you are somehow parenting them while they are in the classroom all day. |
But can't figure out how to get it out of the pouch. Hope he never works at the Pentagon or attends a concert where phones get pouched. |
You made a bunch of dimwitted, nonsense statements to which I responded. You asked about clothes and I said you bought them (and they exist in your house) so feel free to throw them out if they're wearing them inappropriately. Same goes with if they can't follow phone-in-a-bag rules. As for classroom behavior, you brought that up, too. The fact is that kids who can't sit still or keep their mouths shut aren't punished because parents like you are classroom lawyers that prevent teachers from teaching properly with all your "what about" and "how about" questions concerning rules that a 2-year-old wouldn't even ask. And you might want to brush up on your if-clauses because it might help you to actually comprehend when you are reading hypotheticals so you can respond properly. Or I guess you could just copy pasta into a chatbot and ask to reword using a 5-year-old's vocabulary. |
I'm surprised more parents aren't concerned about the loss of instructional time due to the pouches. Do parents not know that the kids need to leave class early to go unlock the pouches? Do they not care? |
They're not leaving class early. |