Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why my kid needs to take this laptop to and from school. He barely even gets any homework. I miss when they would have a math worksheet of homework and maybe something written. He carried this laptop to and from school daily last year and never used it at home besides to charge.
I didn’t see laptops out for my kindergarten child so I’m hoping/expecting that she won’t have to carry it. I remember my friend telling me that her tiny son had difficulty carrying his backpack with the laptop that was too heavy for him last year. She said he would tip over. The boy was the smallest in his class.
Are you always this dramatic? Chromebooks are not heavy. Buy your kid a backpack and tell them to wear both straps. Done. No, you are not getting paper "worksheets."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why my kid needs to take this laptop to and from school. He barely even gets any homework. I miss when they would have a math worksheet of homework and maybe something written. He carried this laptop to and from school daily last year and never used it at home besides to charge.
I didn’t see laptops out for my kindergarten child so I’m hoping/expecting that she won’t have to carry it. I remember my friend telling me that her tiny son had difficulty carrying his backpack with the laptop that was too heavy for him last year. She said he would tip over. The boy was the smallest in his class.
Are you always this dramatic? Chromebooks are not heavy. Buy your kid a backpack and tell them to wear both straps. Done. No, you are not getting paper "worksheets."
Anonymous wrote:We (two teachers) were both told it is a condition of the ESSER funding.
Anonymous wrote:What happened to all the carts schools had pre covid? Thats where the grade level laptops were stored/out of sight, iut of mind and plugged in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At back to school they said they want the kids to charge them at home every night. Given that they're not assigning homework, charging would be the only reason that would make sense to me.
This is what we did last year and it was ridiculous. Took them back and forth just to charge.
Anonymous wrote:At back to school they said they want the kids to charge them at home every night. Given that they're not assigning homework, charging would be the only reason that would make sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:My kids teacher had them on laptops ALL day last year and they never came home to charge. Thats a weird reason:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At back to school they said they want the kids to charge them at home every night. Given that they're not assigning homework, charging would be the only reason that would make sense to me.
We also send them home so that they come back the next day charged. Even though we don't use them every day, when we do need them we aren't able to have most of them plugged in at one time. We don't assign hw.
Teacher
Anonymous wrote:At back to school they said they want the kids to charge them at home every night. Given that they're not assigning homework, charging would be the only reason that would make sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, they don't have textbooks, so what's the problem? Is that still too heavy?
Yes, it is too heavy, especially for climbing in and out of the school bus. Current pediatric recommendation is for kids to carry not more than 10-15% of their body weight. There are many K-3 kids who weigh 40-60 lb, so you can do the math. When you account for backpacks, water bottles, snack, lunch boxes there isn’t room to add something that weighs another 5 lbs.
And, we are not talking about older students, but young elementary.
K-2 weren’t bringing them home to begin with, so you can up your weight limits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why my kid needs to take this laptop to and from school. He barely even gets any homework. I miss when they would have a math worksheet of homework and maybe something written. He carried this laptop to and from school daily last year and never used it at home besides to charge.
I didn’t see laptops out for my kindergarten child so I’m hoping/expecting that she won’t have to carry it. I remember my friend telling me that her tiny son had difficulty carrying his backpack with the laptop that was too heavy for him last year. She said he would tip over. The boy was the smallest in his class.
Are you always this dramatic? Chromebooks are not heavy. Buy your kid a backpack and tell them to wear both straps. Done. No, you are not getting paper "worksheets."
The PP didn’t say it is a Chromebook. Our students don’t have Chromebooks.
You’re being pedantic- laptop, chromebook, whatever. It’s still lighter than pretty much any textbook