I’m very curious about the age of these mobile phone dependent parents. You have HS students, aren’t you GenX and know how to navigate the world without constant internet connections, like reading a map, paper schedule, and tracking down a phone when needed? |
They use their aps provided laptop which they have free access to. Coaches all communicate practice cancellations via team app that all players are part of. They get an email when team app cancels a practice. They access the email on their APS laptop. |
high school students come and go, especially older ones. |
Let me ask you this. When you need to pull up something quickly when you're on the go, what do YOU use? I'm guessing you don't stop, pull your laptop out of your purse, turn it on, wait for it to power up, balance it on ... something... and check. Instead of pulling out your phone. |
They're leaving campus to take an ART bus somewhere during the school day with their phone still locked in a pouch? What? |
Aren't they only "on the go" for about 4 minutes between classes? Most of the time during the school day they're in class, likely working on their laptop. The exceptions are classes like PE or music, when they shouldn't be on their phone anyways. Before and after school they have access to their phone. So this is only during the school day. |
I’m sorry your student needs to consult their phone to navigate the school building, life will be challenging. |
Enough with the ART you loon. Not everyone wants to take the bus nor does it go everywhere. |
That was someone else. The point is they can sort all the afternoon out with FaceTiming mom after school. |
School mode is useless. It just makes them type their code to unlock it. I told my kid his watch must be in airplane mode or it stays home. He knows I can see how many times he unlocked it during the day. |
Sit on your hands like it’s pre-cellphone times. If it’s a crisis, your kids should be focused on following lockdown instructions from teachers and first responders, not having dozens of watches and phones pinging and creating more chaos. |
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After reading this thread, I'm considering advocating to adjust one of my kids' IEPs to have their phone on them in honor of all of your condescension towards those who have reasonable criticisms of cellphone bans.
Parent's rights don't exist until it's certain parent's rights I see. |
What exactly is your criticism? I have no problem with kids having access to their cellphone if they have a real need. My DD's best friend always has her cellphone to manage her insulin pump. Totally fine and within APS policy. |
| I don't think kids need their phones. I just wonder why they couldn't keep using the pouches in the classrooms that they already paid for. Why this huge expense and time consuming practice going in and out each day? |
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