If you opt out, what happens when there is a Chromebook based assignment? Your child grabs a notebook and heads to the library? |
Ask and let us know. In middle school at least, I feel like you’d miss more than half the classes… |
Hopefully by the 22nd century we will finally recognize that giving kids devices designed to be addictive while they are supposed to be learning is counterproductive. |
My kid’s MS English teacher said he spent a lot more class time than he used to having kids handwrite essays because if they used Chrome books, it was hard to tell what they were plagiarizing anymore even as he ran it through plagiarism software. |
Opt out means nothing in MCPS. |
You can still cheat via handwriting assignments. |
Read a book, practice their handwriting, practice vocab or do a math worksheet. If it’s important the teacher will give a paper version of the assignment and they do that. |
In class? How does that work? Do you have a tiny mini computer under your desk that you plagiarize from? |
Yeah I don’t think you can opt out if you don’t like MCPS’s selected method of teaching. It doesn’t work that way. I agree it’s a problem but MCPS is not changing on this. Send your kid to Waldorf private schools if you want a screen free environment |
Last year, my middle school had a rule that if a student forgot their Chromebook or it wasn’t charged, as the teacher you had to give an alternative assignment. They were all harder than the digital assignment because it turns out that most students don’t know how to use textbooks and other print resources. They are accustomed to just using a search function to highlight key phrases, for example. |
Students cheat the same way that they did before we had computers in schools. When I last taught HS, students glued cheat sheets onto the back of water bottle labels. |
That mom will cava in two weeks. |
Sometimes, it just isn’t possible to replicate a paper version because it’s a research skill or looking a bias in media. |
Pyle MS did this. |