Some states are using yonder pouches. Cell phones are locked away in pouches all day. MCPS parents can’t handle a full day ban on phones so here we are |
+1 The teacher is being lazy. They should either have extension material available or have the students work in something for another class rather than let them take out phones. In my class the priority order is my classwork, other classwork, something else productive related to a club or hobby, or reading a book. It’s really not that hard to keep kids off phones if you set the expectation. And shockingly, if several are done early they might even just chat with their peers (which has really vanished since the pandemic). |
Do you think every policy is strictly enforced? |
Except when students don't put them in the pouches to begin with. Which they wouldn't. |
And how do you stop students from sneaking in phones without locking them in pouches? Are you going to have staff conduct pat downs on teenage girls as they enter the school? |
| It really needs to be a state law. “School policies” leave way too much room for lack of enforcement. |
Maybe you could bring in the National Guard to police it, too! |
In other districts, if a kid is caught with a phone out, it is confiscated by administrators and parents need to come get it. Once you inconvenience parents, the kids behavior improves real fast. Real consequences work. |
And I'm sure parents love being told that their kids filmed sex acts on school grounds. Yet it still happens. |
They wouldn't because mcps doesnt understand its role as authoritarian. There is no punishment or consequences. If the students got it in their heads to rebel as a group, there would be nothing mcps could do. Any authority is a mirage. |
Imagine being such a polyanna that you think an inappropriate intimate video meant anything other than screwing |
Maybe Trump can ask his good friend, Putin, to come over and train our staff. Authoritarian regimes always have great outcomes. |
If that many are done early most days it should signify to the teacher that they can cover more content, go deeper, or assign more difficult assignments. |
No. And that the crux of the issue. |
Indeed. Unrealistic expectations from parents are at the heart of many of our problems. |