Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this true for all middle schools that kids won't be allowed to use cell phones in hallways, study hall, and lunch? One parent who is very annoyed.
You are annoyed that your child has to concentrate on school at school?
My child uses his phone to take notes and reminders among othwr important things and yes at lunch to play games with friends. Why would the school care if he used it in a hall between classes or at lunch. How does that affect the classes? If anything it hinders them. Like most adults he does better with apps from his phone for organizing than paper.
Seriously, it causes problems.
Policoes are designed for the majority...not the exception.
Anonymous wrote:As a veteran teacher, I say keep the phones in backpacks all day. To be honest, what upsets me more is seeing teachers and IAs on their phones, especially at recess and while supervising kids who are quietly working. Principals are very lax about cracking down on that and it is a safety issue. I turn off my phone before school and pull it out after school. If there is a family emergency, the front office can take a call and find me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this true for all middle schools that kids won't be allowed to use cell phones in hallways, study hall, and lunch? One parent who is very annoyed.
You are annoyed that your child has to concentrate on school at school?
My child uses his phone to take notes and reminders among othwr important things and yes at lunch to play games with friends. Why would the school care if he used it in a hall between classes or at lunch. How does that affect the classes? If anything it hinders them. Like most adults he does better with apps from his phone for organizing than paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this true for all middle schools that kids won't be allowed to use cell phones in hallways, study hall, and lunch? One parent who is very annoyed.
You are annoyed that your child has to concentrate on school at school?
Anonymous wrote:As a veteran teacher, I say keep the phones in backpacks all day. To be honest, what upsets me more is seeing teachers and IAs on their phones, especially at recess and while supervising kids who are quietly working. Principals are very lax about cracking down on that and it is a safety issue. I turn off my phone before school and pull it out after school. If there is a family emergency, the front office can take a call and find me.
Anonymous wrote:Is this true for all middle schools that kids won't be allowed to use cell phones in hallways, study hall, and lunch? One parent who is very annoyed.
Anonymous wrote:Is this true for all middle schools that kids won't be allowed to use cell phones in hallways, study hall, and lunch? One parent who is very annoyed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have noticed a huge change in cell phone use in high schools over the past few years. Really, they are not an issue. Occasionally students need reminders to put theirs away but the vast majority of my students have not been distracted by their phones. I do not mind if they occasionally send a text and put it away. That’s the world we live in.
The laptops and other types of technology have made my job extremely difficult. They are the distraction. Whenever I’m using them in class, students are openly trying to do something else and no longer trying to hide it. I spend more time trying to manage these behaviors than teach. I’m hoping thrill wears off in a few years like it did with cell phones since students are also using laptops earlier and earlier and we can actually focus in class on instruction.
that’s great...especially since FCPS is issuing every student in our HS a laptop to use in class
Anonymous wrote:I have noticed a huge change in cell phone use in high schools over the past few years. Really, they are not an issue. Occasionally students need reminders to put theirs away but the vast majority of my students have not been distracted by their phones. I do not mind if they occasionally send a text and put it away. That’s the world we live in.
The laptops and other types of technology have made my job extremely difficult. They are the distraction. Whenever I’m using them in class, students are openly trying to do something else and no longer trying to hide it. I spend more time trying to manage these behaviors than teach. I’m hoping thrill wears off in a few years like it did with cell phones since students are also using laptops earlier and earlier and we can actually focus in class on instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have noticed a huge change in cell phone use in high schools over the past few years. Really, they are not an issue. Occasionally students need reminders to put theirs away but the vast majority of my students have not been distracted by their phones. I do not mind if they occasionally send a text and put it away. That’s the world we live in.
The laptops and other types of technology have made my job extremely difficult. They are the distraction. Whenever I’m using them in class, students are openly trying to do something else and no longer trying to hide it. I spend more time trying to manage these behaviors than teach. I’m hoping thrill wears off in a few years like it did with cell phones since students are also using laptops earlier and earlier and we can actually focus in class on instruction.
Not sure what high school you teach at, but my FCPS high schoolers report kids being on their phone throughout class much of the time. My daughters best friend’s boyfriend is at a different school and he would literally be on the phone with her via air pods during class sometimes. These are not the slackers, either. These are all honors and AP students with great GPAs . It’s a huge issue and no, kids are not being as mature about it as you think. They’re just getting better at hiding it via apple watches and air pods. My son was at a private school until 10th and phones were completely prohibited throughout the school day. The kids actually had conversations at lunch. He actually misses that.