Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has lightspeed as an option for teachers to use in schools. However, each school that wants it has to pay for it out of their very limited budgets. Lightspeed monitors kids in real time, allows blocking of sites, restricting of sites to only that one the student should be on, allows teacher to lock students screen, close open tabs, etc.
If Lightspeed does this, FCPS hasn’t taught the teachers how to use those functions.
It’s coming. Not all schools have it yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s weird fcps doesn’t use something like go guardian where teachers can block sites or limit the sites kids can be on during school. MCPS uses GG. Can individual schools implement it or does it have to be systemwide? The internet has enough distractions as it is, we need some guardrails for kids, esp young kids whose self regulation is still developing.
Even with GoGuardian, the kids still manage to play games. It is not possible to block chrome/Google and the kids use it as a back door into games. Google Doodle often includes games.
All you can do is lock a kid’s screen. Then, they have an excuse why they didn’t complete an assignment.
It’s sad because it is an issue of dependency, if not outright addiction. Parents aren’t taking it seriously enough. If they did, there would be daily protests outside of the headquarters of Google until a better product was developed that prevented 5th and 6th graders from creating and sharing Google docs with hundreds of game links.
Anonymous wrote:So is more effective use of lightspeed like blocking, restricting to help kids stay on task coming?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has lightspeed as an option for teachers to use in schools. However, each school that wants it has to pay for it out of their very limited budgets. Lightspeed monitors kids in real time, allows blocking of sites, restricting of sites to only that one the student should be on, allows teacher to lock students screen, close open tabs, etc.
If Lightspeed does this, FCPS hasn’t taught the teachers how to use those functions.
Anonymous wrote:It’s weird fcps doesn’t use something like go guardian where teachers can block sites or limit the sites kids can be on during school. MCPS uses GG. Can individual schools implement it or does it have to be systemwide? The internet has enough distractions as it is, we need some guardrails for kids, esp young kids whose self regulation is still developing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has lightspeed as an option for teachers to use in schools. However, each school that wants it has to pay for it out of their very limited budgets. Lightspeed monitors kids in real time, allows blocking of sites, restricting of sites to only that one the student should be on, allows teacher to lock students screen, close open tabs, etc.
If Lightspeed does this, FCPS hasn’t taught the teachers how to use those functions.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS has lightspeed as an option for teachers to use in schools. However, each school that wants it has to pay for it out of their very limited budgets. Lightspeed monitors kids in real time, allows blocking of sites, restricting of sites to only that one the student should be on, allows teacher to lock students screen, close open tabs, etc.