Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would rather opt my ES age kids out of using laptops altogether.
I agree, but then I also am a Luddite who believes in printed textbooks, teaching correct spelling & grammar, and teaching cursive handwriting.
Anonymous wrote:I would rather opt my ES age kids out of using laptops altogether.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All kids receive a laptop. Sometimes it's new and sometimes it isn't.
wow, rich county! Not sure it is like this in the rest of the country
Anonymous wrote:Colossal waste. They need to ask who needs a laptop. Instead, FCPS thinks it's freaking Oprah: "YOU get a laptop! YOU get a laptop!...."
Anonymous wrote:privileged kids living in fairfax county
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours is falling apart. The screen has a permanent mark and there is some screw loose on the bottom.
Then have your kid take it to IT and trade it in for a new one.
Or tell your kid not to damage it in the first place. The reason so many FCPS laptops are in rough shape is that kids don’t have accountability for anything anymore and treat school supplies like garbage. Then the parents scream at the school, not their kids.
Giving a laptop to grade school kids is ludicrous. No, they don't treat them properly. Yes, it is the schools' fault for giving the laptop to the kids before they are ready.
When we were in school, years ago, the first "electronic device" we got were graphing calculators in middle school. We were told to be very careful with them, to treat them like glass, that they were expensive ($100 then and now). And later we treated our other electronics carefully.
Kids these days are given ipads in rubber cases in preschool and laptops at very young ages. They are not taught to be careful, they are too young for that anyway. They learn to abuse the electronics because that is how the devices are used.
Laptops also contribute to the deterioration of academics and school. But that's a separate issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours is falling apart. The screen has a permanent mark and there is some screw loose on the bottom.
Then have your kid take it to IT and trade it in for a new one.
Or tell your kid not to damage it in the first place. The reason so many FCPS laptops are in rough shape is that kids don’t have accountability for anything anymore and treat school supplies like garbage. Then the parents scream at the school, not their kids.
Giving a laptop to grade school kids is ludicrous. No, they don't treat them properly. Yes, it is the schools' fault for giving the laptop to the kids before they are ready.
When we were in school, years ago, the first "electronic device" we got were graphing calculators in middle school. We were told to be very careful with them, to treat them like glass, that they were expensive ($100 then and now). And later we treated our other electronics carefully.
Kids these days are given ipads in rubber cases in preschool and laptops at very young ages. They are not taught to be careful, they are too young for that anyway. They learn to abuse the electronics because that is how the devices are used.
Laptops also contribute to the deterioration of academics and school. But that's a separate issue.
The majority of kids treat their laptops just fine. It’s always like two boys in the class, there seems to be a direct link to their level of cleanliness and maturity, to how their laptop is cared for.
Oh? That's why the laptops that are not brand new are disasters? Just two kids are wrecking all of the older laptops? Or maybe regular Dell laptops are not suitable for the task and the entire 1-to-1 concept is poorly thought out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours is falling apart. The screen has a permanent mark and there is some screw loose on the bottom.
Then have your kid take it to IT and trade it in for a new one.
Or tell your kid not to damage it in the first place. The reason so many FCPS laptops are in rough shape is that kids don’t have accountability for anything anymore and treat school supplies like garbage. Then the parents scream at the school, not their kids.
Giving a laptop to grade school kids is ludicrous. No, they don't treat them properly. Yes, it is the schools' fault for giving the laptop to the kids before they are ready.
When we were in school, years ago, the first "electronic device" we got were graphing calculators in middle school. We were told to be very careful with them, to treat them like glass, that they were expensive ($100 then and now). And later we treated our other electronics carefully.
Kids these days are given ipads in rubber cases in preschool and laptops at very young ages. They are not taught to be careful, they are too young for that anyway. They learn to abuse the electronics because that is how the devices are used.
Laptops also contribute to the deterioration of academics and school. But that's a separate issue.
The majority of kids treat their laptops just fine. It’s always like two boys in the class, there seems to be a direct link to their level of cleanliness and maturity, to how their laptop is cared for.
Oh? That's why the laptops that are not brand new are disasters? Just two kids are wrecking all of the older laptops? Or maybe regular Dell laptops are not suitable for the task and the entire 1-to-1 concept is poorly thought out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours is falling apart. The screen has a permanent mark and there is some screw loose on the bottom.
Then have your kid take it to IT and trade it in for a new one.
Or tell your kid not to damage it in the first place. The reason so many FCPS laptops are in rough shape is that kids don’t have accountability for anything anymore and treat school supplies like garbage. Then the parents scream at the school, not their kids.
Giving a laptop to grade school kids is ludicrous. No, they don't treat them properly. Yes, it is the schools' fault for giving the laptop to the kids before they are ready.
When we were in school, years ago, the first "electronic device" we got were graphing calculators in middle school. We were told to be very careful with them, to treat them like glass, that they were expensive ($100 then and now). And later we treated our other electronics carefully.
Kids these days are given ipads in rubber cases in preschool and laptops at very young ages. They are not taught to be careful, they are too young for that anyway. They learn to abuse the electronics because that is how the devices are used.
Laptops also contribute to the deterioration of academics and school. But that's a separate issue.
The majority of kids treat their laptops just fine. It’s always like two boys in the class, there seems to be a direct link to their level of cleanliness and maturity, to how their laptop is cared for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours is falling apart. The screen has a permanent mark and there is some screw loose on the bottom.
Then have your kid take it to IT and trade it in for a new one.
Or tell your kid not to damage it in the first place. The reason so many FCPS laptops are in rough shape is that kids don’t have accountability for anything anymore and treat school supplies like garbage. Then the parents scream at the school, not their kids.
Giving a laptop to grade school kids is ludicrous. No, they don't treat them properly. Yes, it is the schools' fault for giving the laptop to the kids before they are ready.
When we were in school, years ago, the first "electronic device" we got were graphing calculators in middle school. We were told to be very careful with them, to treat them like glass, that they were expensive ($100 then and now). And later we treated our other electronics carefully.
Kids these days are given ipads in rubber cases in preschool and laptops at very young ages. They are not taught to be careful, they are too young for that anyway. They learn to abuse the electronics because that is how the devices are used.
Laptops also contribute to the deterioration of academics and school. But that's a separate issue.