Yes, I am aware, thanks. The above was posted to help the previous poster understand the public transportation options available to current Deal students now. |
Our W7 MS collects phones and puts them into little plastic pouches. I’m fine with this lower tech solution. The Yondr pouches will probably break or be opened by the kids - waste of money. But our school is much smaller than Deal. |
How ridiculous. Your child shouldn't be coordinating after-school activities while in math class. The phone will be waiting for your child before she heads to the bus stop. The scenario you describe is one of the reasons not to allow phones in class! |
| Schools also need some seriously tight oversight of web-connect devices in the classroom. DCPS laptops often have lists of blocked websites and blocked keywords that are too short and don't evolve as quickly as kids' workarounds. That requires manhours but it doesn’t make sense to leave that to each teacher. It could be monitored and updated a lot more dynamically and consistently at the whole school level with a dedicated staff. |
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My child was cyber bullied at Deal.
A classmate videoed a situation and posted it on social media. The child's phone was confiscated - but it did not matter as once the video is out there - it can not be taken down. Kids at this age do not understand the consequences. |
Our school tells the students to keep their phones in the lockers. If the teacher sees one in class, the phone is confiscated and sent to the main office where the kid can pick it up at the end of the day. |
+1. I like this because if my kid really has something to tell me, he can text when he visits his locker between periods. But otherwise, no phone in class. |
And if a child doesn’t hand over the phone? This is why deal needs something more. |
+1 this used to be the Deal policy and it didn't work in a middle school of 1400 kids. |
| I bet if your kid puts his phone in his backpack and never takes it out during the school day, they can skip using the yonder pouches. |
| Cell phones are a nuisance for teens. It helps so much to make teens lock their phones up during school. My kids go to Banneker and both have admitted it’s been very helpful and really like it now. The dopamine hit is real and concerning. |
but she'll get it back at the end of the day and be able to access bus schedules or change plans then, right? Remember what we used to do BEFORE SMARTPHONES? We dealt with stuff. We're fine. Kids are NOT fine with phones (neither are adults, IMO, but that's a different story.) If it's a choice between my kid standing in a thundershower and decimating my their attention span, I know which one I'd pick. |
The quote function is goofy -- this is a response to a person who suggests that the solution is to have kids not have phones at all. |
| Seems like the kids who ignored the previous policy will also be just as likely to ignore this one. Not sure this does anything new. |
Good for Banneker for doing this. |