In person school will be in trouble if using laptops, kids will just youtube and surf the web

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher. That ship sailed long ago. Even the best students do it. I’m not happy about it from a “future of humanity” perspective but teachers made their peace with this pre pandemic.


Why aren't you designing your teaching so that students don't have much time/opportunity to be sitting on their devices?


There is no teaching that is more exciting to a kid determined to be on or addicted to their phone. There just isn’t. I have had parents email me and say “he gets so distracted by his iPad/phone can you just take it in your class?” and I have flat out responded your job is to tell him to leave it at home, not to ask me to confiscate it.


My kids are in elementary school. They don't have phones or tablets. But the schools have decided it's a good idea to let them loose on unlocked laptops. During a pandemic, it's one thing. In a school building, with regular classes, next fall?

I expect my children's teachers to be smarter than that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher. That ship sailed long ago. Even the best students do it. I’m not happy about it from a “future of humanity” perspective but teachers made their peace with this pre pandemic.


Why aren't you designing your teaching so that students don't have much time/opportunity to be sitting on their devices?


There is no teaching that is more exciting to a kid determined to be on or addicted to their phone. There just isn’t. I have had parents email me and say “he gets so distracted by his iPad/phone can you just take it in your class?” and I have flat out responded your job is to tell him to leave it at home, not to ask me to confiscate it.


My kids are in elementary school. They don't have phones or tablets. But the schools have decided it's a good idea to let them loose on unlocked laptops. During a pandemic, it's one thing. In a school building, with regular classes, next fall?

I expect my children's teachers to be smarter than that.


To be smarter than what? If the district buys them devices and platforms and tells us to use them we have to do that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher. That ship sailed long ago. Even the best students do it. I’m not happy about it from a “future of humanity” perspective but teachers made their peace with this pre pandemic.


Why aren't you designing your teaching so that students don't have much time/opportunity to be sitting on their devices?


There is no teaching that is more exciting to a kid determined to be on or addicted to their phone. There just isn’t. I have had parents email me and say “he gets so distracted by his iPad/phone can you just take it in your class?” and I have flat out responded your job is to tell him to leave it at home, not to ask me to confiscate it.


My kids are in elementary school. They don't have phones or tablets. But the schools have decided it's a good idea to let them loose on unlocked laptops. During a pandemic, it's one thing. In a school building, with regular classes, next fall?

I expect my children's teachers to be smarter than that.



Upper ES has phones. Shocked at how many 9 year olds have Iphones.
Anonymous
Ridiculous. My son is in 6th grade in a middle class type school and NONE of this friends have phones. And he has a lot of friends. My 4th grader's friends certainly don't have phones.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. My son is in 6th grade in a middle class type school and NONE of this friends have phones. And he has a lot of friends. My 4th grader's friends certainly don't have phones.



6th grade teacher here. I would say 1/2 my students have phones.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Mark my words, the way these kids use the laptops during school time is going to be a major problem.

Kids are going to surf the web and youtube etc.

It's going to be a major problem and the schools have no recourse because online learning in person is not part of the education curriculum or agreed upon method of teaching as per VDOE guidelines.


ok? The do the same now


I am a parent who refuses to discipline my child and I am very concerned that schools think that extending the online to inperson is going to be a problem, my kid is not able to focus online unless the laptops are configured to lockdown all services except for BB. It has been a constant battle because my kid is not engaged in online and end up moving on to games, youtube etc. which are all open on fcps laptops.

This online learning was never meant to be a replacement for in-person, it was a stop gap while covid shutdown schools and was never supposed to go on longer than a few months. It is bad.


Fixed this for you.


Okay, so teachers are going to be on top of this in the classroom. Good to hear.


Why is this he teacher's responsibility? You're the parent. You should've been parenting your child and given him consequences for not paying attention/doing his schoolwork. You absolutely can't blame the teacher for this parenting fail.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:“ If your kid is determined to screw off and play games or watch youtube at home, then guess what: they will do it at school too.”

Which is why theirs should be on FCPS to block their laptops from accessing YouTube and other sites. Allow teachers to access it and they can show what is needed.


No. it's why you should parent your child and teach him not to do that shit.
Anonymous
I teach fifth grade. If students try to get on other applications or videos during a classroom activity I tell them to get off; and they listen to me because I'm their teacher and those are my expectations. Not sure why this post discussion is so long, it's never been a problem before (at least in ES).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I teach fifth grade. If students try to get on other applications or videos during a classroom activity I tell them to get off; and they listen to me because I'm their teacher and those are my expectations. Not sure why this post discussion is so long, it's never been a problem before (at least in ES).


Lmao 5th grade. Please teach 11th grade and see if they just compliantly listen to you. No.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At least they're in the classroom and that is half the battle.



What magic occurs in the school building while the teacher continues to teach online?


Babysitting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Mark my words, the way these kids use the laptops during school time is going to be a major problem.

Kids are going to surf the web and youtube etc.

It's going to be a major problem and the schools have no recourse because online learning in person is not part of the education curriculum or agreed upon method of teaching as per VDOE guidelines.


It's easy for the schools to block that.


They don't. They can't since teachers use it every day.


You know there can be different levels of administrative access for teachers and children, right?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. My son is in 6th grade in a middle class type school and NONE of this friends have phones. And he has a lot of friends. My 4th grader's friends certainly don't have phones.


If true, that’s very rare. Many, many upper ES kids have phones. By 6th grade, more have phones than not.
Anonymous
“Why is this he teacher's responsibility? You're the parent. You should've been parenting your child and given him consequences for not paying attention/doing his schoolwork. You absolutely can't blame the teacher for this parenting fail.”

This is not on the teachers. It is on FCPS for not appropriately locking down the laptops site access.
Anonymous
It’s not any worse than the cell phones.
post reply Forum Index » VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Message Quick Reply
Go to: