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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Parent advocates who lobbied for Away All Day phone policy feel blindsided, ignored by new MCPS phone policy"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]SOURCE: https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-new-guidelines-away-all-day-students-use-cell-phones-school-changes-personal-mobile-device-mcps-cellphone-update-elementary-middle-high-instructional-time-lunch-between-classes-maryland-education-crisis-focus-parents-concerns# [QUOTE]MCPS parent Jeremy Joseph sent the following statement to 7News about the new cell phone update: “Overall, this is a positive step forward at the ES and MS level and a huge step backward for HS. Explicitly allowing HS students to have phones during lunch and passing periods is totally and completely out of step with how Superintendent Taylor handled this issue last year in Stafford County or what LA County did in February and Baltimore County does and how countries around the world (including Brazil and Denmark) are tackling this issue. This policy is only going to put MCPS high school students further behind compared to their peers in more forward-thinking municipalities, and only further harm Montgomery County's economic growth as the kids will come out of HS less prepared. What's most upsetting is that in late March the County promised a robust comment process and engagement in finalizing the updated policy, which did not occur. Why did they make the decision to allow highschoolers to keep their phones during lunch and passing periods? We don't know? How will the phone policy be enforced differently from the prior policy? We don't know - there is no detail provided. And they released this policy on a Friday afternoon, which in DC is when you drop something you want to bury. The new policy would appear to reduce principal discretion to keep phones out of schools during lunch and passing periods, which is the only proven way to reduce the distraction of the phones to improve learning outcomes, reduce fights and bullying, and promote critical face to face interactions and allow kids to make new friends unbound by their online contacts. At a minimum, the policy should be updated to allow HS principals the discretion to adopt the proven Away All Day policies. Forcing this lowest common denominator is deeply troubling and counterproductive. Some principals will have the chutzpah and moral conviction to do what's right, and the policy should not limit their initiative. But really, the county should simply do what the Superintendent did last year in Stafford County or what LA County did in February and Baltimore County and around the world (including Brazil and Denmark) - keep the phones out of the kids hands from first bell to last bell. That's what the data shows is the right choice across all relevant metrics: security, academic learning, socio-emotional success and an inclusive school environment, for teacher retention and satisfaction and for budget reasons (20% of each HS class is taken up by policing the phones). There's no data provided that makes this policy the right long-term choice for HS students! As you know, a group of parents submitted a petition with more than 2,000 signatures supporting Away All Day policies, including in HS. We have not received any response from MCPS in response to our petition. We are happy to continue engaging with MCPS on these important topics.”[/QUOTE][/quote] Good effing Lord, when are parents going to understand they're not important stakeholders in public education? They need to stop complaining about every little thing and stay in their lane. This guy sounds like a clown.[/quote] I mean, my dude has enough money to live in-bounds for Walt Whitman. He could pay for Washington Waldorf if that's what he wanted. But expecting every kid in school to follow [b]his family's[/b] rules around screen use is ludicrous. My kids don't cover their hair or keep kosher just because some of their classmates do, nor would I expect them to follow the rules of my family. [/quote] Sorry but this logic sucks. If something is a problem in public schools, the answer isn’t “wealthy people just flee to private.” It’s “fix what’s wrong”[/quote]
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