Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are absolutely the problem and to blame. And now schools are being blamed for the poor attention, learning, and lack of meaningful socialization so they want schools to fix the issue by banning phones. Most schools already have a policy for putting phones away, but now they will have to invest in pouches and a lock boxes to manage the fix.
Meanwhile budget cuts.
Schools are blamed because:
1. They a policy on paper but don't enforce
2. Some teachers encourage phone use despite the written policy because they want to be the "cool teacher" or don't want to come up with something else to fill the down time once busywork is done
3. School systems make each individual school come up with their own way of handling the issue without giving additional resources to make enforcement effective
Private schools don't have this problem because they implement phone bans and follow through.
Anonymous wrote:All the research is out, phones are awful for our kids. Not to mention they never belonged in classrooms to begin with. Is there any movement by MCPS to ban phones in classrooms? What’s the best way to organize for banning phones? School by school or at the MCPS level?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine don’t have phones still, but you can’t ban them entirely. Many do need them for after-school activities, communicating where they are, work arrangements, etc
No, they don’t.
And you don’t need to be on dcum, but here you are
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has two children in middle school, I'm okay with a ban so long as each room still has a landline or its VOIP equivalent. (This is not always a given.)
As a teacher, mostly in elementary school, cellphones are still a problem. I would not mind them being banned, so that we have their full attention.
Anonymous wrote:I found out this week that for one of my courses every single test question from my unit exams has been put on quizlet. Probably by another teacher thinking it would be a way to study. It’s also basically an entire answer key to Google during the test.
Not sure what to do other than ban personal devices during exams now. You can imagine the fight from students on this.
Anonymous wrote:Parents are absolutely the problem and to blame. And now schools are being blamed for the poor attention, learning, and lack of meaningful socialization so they want schools to fix the issue by banning phones. Most schools already have a policy for putting phones away, but now they will have to invest in pouches and a lock boxes to manage the fix.
Meanwhile budget cuts.