Anonymous wrote:This sounds very much like a parenting issue. Why is your child texting you multiple times a day? What is that all about? Why can't you tell her "keep your phone in your locker all day, you don't need it in class. You can text me at lunch or at dismissal."? Why can't you be an actual parent and have rules and consequences? Why are you trying to get the school to parent your child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD says the teachers don’t even have the same rules (some allow the phones, some don’t). All students are allowed to use them during lunch.
Should I go to administration and ask why they are not enforcing executive order 33?
-OP
No, you should take your daughter's phone away since she can't use it responsibly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What school, OP? Why haven't you told her to stop texting you?
Robinson is absolutely strict on it. No phones or airpods outside the 30 minutes of lunch, and then ONLY within the walls of the cafeteria. Use at any other time results in a referral with escalating consequences (detentions, saturday school, parent meetings, phone having to be checked in at the office each morning, etc)
I still write 3-5 referrals per week, but 95% of kids are following rules.
do you write them up after 4th time they get caught or do they start 1st offense ?
Anonymous wrote:DD says the teachers don’t even have the same rules (some allow the phones, some don’t). All students are allowed to use them during lunch.
Should I go to administration and ask why they are not enforcing executive order 33?
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What school, OP? Why haven't you told her to stop texting you?
Robinson is absolutely strict on it. No phones or airpods outside the 30 minutes of lunch, and then ONLY within the walls of the cafeteria. Use at any other time results in a referral with escalating consequences (detentions, saturday school, parent meetings, phone having to be checked in at the office each morning, etc)
I still write 3-5 referrals per week, but 95% of kids are following rules.
Langley. I have told her to stop but the bigger issue is that they all have access to them during the day, which is a distraction in and of itself. The school should be physically taking the phones at the beginning of the school day and not returning them until the end of the day.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:My child’s high school has a “away for the day” policy. This means my kid has access to her phone all day at school, she texts me multiple times a day. They are all allowed to use them during lunch.
I looked up executive order 33 on VDOE and the description of the executive order does not match what our high school is doing.
Is everyone else finding this to be true in their high schools? If so, what do we do about it? How do we make them enforce the actual executive order?
Anonymous wrote:DD says the teachers don’t even have the same rules (some allow the phones, some don’t). All students are allowed to use them during lunch.
Should I go to administration and ask why they are not enforcing executive order 33?
-OP
Anonymous wrote:What school, OP? Why haven't you told her to stop texting you?
Robinson is absolutely strict on it. No phones or airpods outside the 30 minutes of lunch, and then ONLY within the walls of the cafeteria. Use at any other time results in a referral with escalating consequences (detentions, saturday school, parent meetings, phone having to be checked in at the office each morning, etc)
I still write 3-5 referrals per week, but 95% of kids are following rules.
Anonymous wrote:What school, OP? Why haven't you told her to stop texting you?
Robinson is absolutely strict on it. No phones or airpods outside the 30 minutes of lunch, and then ONLY within the walls of the cafeteria. Use at any other time results in a referral with escalating consequences (detentions, saturday school, parent meetings, phone having to be checked in at the office each morning, etc)
I still write 3-5 referrals per week, but 95% of kids are following rules.