Anonymous wrote:What if you switched your perspective on this? Is it possible that the students were supposed to be writing an essay, creating a presentation, etc., and were sneaking around and playing video games instead? Does your child have a responsibility to be doing what they are supposed to be doing?
Anonymous wrote:The English teachers at my HS school are switching to paper due to AI use. So many late assessments turned in at the end of the quarter were obviously written with AI. So, easy to catch. Students had nothing to lose though. 0 for nothing turned in vs 0 for AI use. No risk to them. Some other consequence should be applied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4th and 5th. I think things were better in the past- now they get “free time” to work on assignments. Which means they play video games.
So you don’t want teachers to give time to work on assignments? What should happen is an audit of kids computer usage and actions follow accordingly. That and it sounds like longer assignments.
Anonymous wrote:What if you switched your perspective on this? Is it possible that the students were supposed to be writing an essay, creating a presentation, etc., and were sneaking around and playing video games instead? Does your child have a responsibility to be doing what they are supposed to be doing?
Anonymous wrote:4th and 5th. I think things were better in the past- now they get “free time” to work on assignments. Which means they play video games.
Anonymous wrote:A major focus at my middle school is only using Chromebooks when it’s totally necessary. We went back to a cart model. There are teachers who are resistant to this change, but most see the benefits for kids.
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher I am planning on going back to pencil and paper assignments for this upcoming school year.