Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for going to this effort on behalf of an important tool that is critical to student success.
I don't know that I believed the metrics provided by the school district saying teachers didn't use GoGuardian much. Admin lies to the BOE.
They do, and they've demonstrated that they're perfectly willing to lie to the BoE. But they don't want to get caught in a lie. Lying about usage figures is dangerous in that respect. There's a clear, quantitative answer, recorded in a third-party system. Sure, they can make up data when they present to the BoE, but they better hope that no one on the inside leaks the real figures.
This would be a strange thing to lie about.
CO is looking at everything at the school level to cut. I hope the board asks for third party evidence. Because otherwise, I would not assume CO is being honest with the numbers.
The place to start cutting is the CO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for going to this effort on behalf of an important tool that is critical to student success.
I don't know that I believed the metrics provided by the school district saying teachers didn't use GoGuardian much. Admin lies to the BOE.
They do, and they've demonstrated that they're perfectly willing to lie to the BoE. But they don't want to get caught in a lie. Lying about usage figures is dangerous in that respect. There's a clear, quantitative answer, recorded in a third-party system. Sure, they can make up data when they present to the BoE, but they better hope that no one on the inside leaks the real figures.
This would be a strange thing to lie about.
CO is looking at everything at the school level to cut. I hope the board asks for third party evidence. Because otherwise, I would not assume CO is being honest with the numbers.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a parent of a child at TPMS. If teachers are using Go Guardian then why have I gotten emails from them complaining that my child is playing games on the chromebook during instruction time? Is go guardian working or are these teachers not using it? I suggest they take away the chromebook and give my child pencil and paper.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a parent of a child at TPMS. If teachers are using Go Guardian then why have I gotten emails from them complaining that my child is playing games on the chromebook during instruction time? Is go guardian working or are these teachers not using it? I suggest they take away the chromebook and give my child pencil and paper.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a parent of a child at TPMS. If teachers are using Go Guardian then why have I gotten emails from them complaining that my child is playing games on the chromebook during instruction time? Is go guardian working or are these teachers not using it? I suggest they take away the chromebook and give my child pencil and paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for going to this effort on behalf of an important tool that is critical to student success.
I don't know that I believed the metrics provided by the school district saying teachers didn't use GoGuardian much. Admin lies to the BOE.
They do, and they've demonstrated that they're perfectly willing to lie to the BoE. But they don't want to get caught in a lie. Lying about usage figures is dangerous in that respect. There's a clear, quantitative answer, recorded in a third-party system. Sure, they can make up data when they present to the BoE, but they better hope that no one on the inside leaks the real figures.
This would be a strange thing to lie about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I think you and all of the other MCPS teachers should stop relying on electronics so much. The pandemic is over. You know what would 100% keep kids from going off task and playing video games? Not working on a laptop all day; having actual textbooks and pieces of paper to write on and then you teachers could go back to grading by hand.
Even though I do think there’s a valid argument to made about the lack of balance in tech use, we are not going to ban it completely, nor should we, so this is not a valid solution to the issue raised by OP and other teachers.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a parent of a child at TPMS. If teachers are using Go Guardian then why have I gotten emails from them complaining that my child is playing games on the chromebook during instruction time? Is go guardian working or are these teachers not using it? I suggest they take away the chromebook and give my child pencil and paper.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think you and all of the other MCPS teachers should stop relying on electronics so much. The pandemic is over. You know what would 100% keep kids from going off task and playing video games? Not working on a laptop all day; having actual textbooks and pieces of paper to write on and then you teachers could go back to grading by hand.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think you and all of the other MCPS teachers should stop relying on electronics so much. The pandemic is over. You know what would 100% keep kids from going off task and playing video games? Not working on a laptop all day; having actual textbooks and pieces of paper to write on and then you teachers could go back to grading by hand.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think you and all of the other MCPS teachers should stop relying on electronics so much. The pandemic is over. You know what would 100% keep kids from going off task and playing video games? Not working on a laptop all day; having actual textbooks and pieces of paper to write on and then you teachers could go back to grading by hand.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think you and all of the other MCPS teachers should stop relying on electronics so much. The pandemic is over. You know what would 100% keep kids from going off task and playing video games? Not working on a laptop all day; having actual textbooks and pieces of paper to write on and then you teachers could go back to grading by hand.