Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
1) it’s impossible to forget, they are literally at every exit a student could choose to use. The bus exit, the kiss and ride exit, the main office—no matter how you leave the building, you must walk past multiple unlocking stations
2) there are always staff at school while kids are at school. We legitimately cannot leave a child behind who isn’t picked up from the after school program. If late buses come at 4:30, someone is on campus making sure everyone gets picked up by 5, at which point they go into the main office and start calling emergency contacts from the office phone. If no one has picked up the child after a certain amount of time (I forget—1 or 2 hours?) the police are called.
The scenario you describe can only happen if a kid walks off campus and comes back later that evening.
Anonymous wrote:Since we are sharing updates and anecdotes, my daughter is at a control school without pouches and reports no issues from the first two weeks. Students have cells off and away, just last like year. Teachers in 8th grade are enforcing this just like her 7th grade teachers did and kids are not trying to sneak them out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
Maybe, but better yet, let's not have the school creating problems that don't need to exist in the first place.
Couldn’t the kid just go back in the school and use the scanner if he forgot on the way out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread has made me realize that while I consider myself an anxious parent/human being, some are waaaaaay beyond that.
Or maybe they’re just angry that they have to play by school rules instead of school following their rules.
Every year I have parented in the public school system, my faith in the school placing the interests of the students over its own interest has dropped. It’s my job to look out for my kid, and sometimes rejecting the school’s rules is the best way to do that.
In another year or two, you'll be a sovereign citizen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread has made me realize that while I consider myself an anxious parent/human being, some are waaaaaay beyond that.
Or maybe they’re just angry that they have to play by school rules instead of school following their rules.
Every year I have parented in the public school system, my faith in the school placing the interests of the students over its own interest has dropped. It’s my job to look out for my kid, and sometimes rejecting the school’s rules is the best way to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My principal was clear that in a true emergency the pouches can be cut open.
But really, phones ruin classrooms 100% of days and true emergencies are exceedingly rare. Worth the trade off, IMO.
I disagree on it being worth the trade-off but I do think/hope that kids will break out their creativity for cutting/prying/deactivating the pouch in an emergency. I feel confident that $18 won't be charged if the emergency is an active shooter. If the emergency is needing a ride home after the school doors are closed, I don't trust the school not to charge me. And I worry about the kid who walks home in the dark rather than risk getting in trouble for destroying the pouch. Safety is more important than the school's need for fancy enforcement. Just prohibit the use of cell phones during the day without creating new problems.
Huh? Quite the scenarios.
Seriously? A kid forgetting to go by the scanner and a mixup on who is doing pickup after school is not only plausible, it is the most predictable of mini-emergencies. It happened to me growing up and to my husband and oodles of other kids. He walked three miles home, and I sat in front of the school and cried until someone remembered me. Yeah, we both survived, but it was not a good thing and not something a school should be causing when there is a simple, free alternative that doesn’t create these issues.