Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Screens are "amazing tools" in schools but if you see a child with an I pad at a grocery store you immediately blame all parents for all the behavioral issues in your classrooms? Do you hear how insane and deluded you all sound?
Ms T, what’s Mount Everest?
40 years ago— “it’s the highest mountain in the world, in Nepal.” Where’s Nepal? “You’ll have to ask your parents or look it up in the encyclopedia you may or may not have at home”
Today—“Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world, let me show you a photo. And here’s a map of where it is; it’s close to China, let me zoom in. After recess I can show you a video of some people climbing it and the indigenous people who help them.”
That’s why it can be an amazing tool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Screens are "amazing tools" in schools but if you see a child with an I pad at a grocery store you immediately blame all parents for all the behavioral issues in your classrooms? Do you hear how insane and deluded you all sound?
Ms T, what’s Mount Everest?
40 years ago— “it’s the highest mountain in the world, in Nepal.” Where’s Nepal? “You’ll have to ask your parents or look it up in the encyclopedia you may or may not have at home”
Today—“Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world, let me show you a photo. And here’s a map of where it is; it’s close to China, let me zoom in. After recess I can show you a video of some people climbing it and the indigenous people who help them.”
That’s why it can be an amazing tool.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is not the interactive boards themselves, they can be very helpful in a variety of ways and it is definitely far more efficient to have content on a slideshow than have the children have to wait while the teacher slowly writes words out on a blackboard or whiteboard. Opposing that seems just reflexively anti-technology to me.
I agree that showing videos of read-aloud books is inferior to actually reading them in person and should be kept to a minimum (but teachers in here have given good reasons for why it makes sense to use them occasionally, and I don't think doing it occasionally is a problem.) Also for everyone saying "you should just pick a different book," I think teachers are often told what books they are supposed to cover based on the curriculum? So if they are told they are supposed to teach a specific book that day and can't access it, they really have limited options besides showing a video of someone reading it...
Anonymous wrote:Screens are "amazing tools" in schools but if you see a child with an I pad at a grocery store you immediately blame all parents for all the behavioral issues in your classrooms? Do you hear how insane and deluded you all sound?
Anonymous wrote:The problem is not the interactive boards themselves, they can be very helpful in a variety of ways and it is definitely far more efficient to have content on a slideshow than have the children have to wait while the teacher slowly writes words out on a blackboard or whiteboard. Opposing that seems just reflexively anti-technology to me.
I agree that showing videos of read-aloud books is inferior to actually reading them in person and should be kept to a minimum (but teachers in here have given good reasons for why it makes sense to use them occasionally, and I don't think doing it occasionally is a problem.) Also for everyone saying "you should just pick a different book," I think teachers are often told what books they are supposed to cover based on the curriculum? So if they are told they are supposed to teach a specific book that day and can't access it, they really have limited options besides showing a video of someone reading it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning my 6 yo asked me if she could "watch" a book that she had "watched" in school. We happened to have the actual book at home, but when I read it, she said the "real" book has sound effects.
Is there any chance of getting rid of these giant screens or at least avoiding having kids regularly watch videos under the guise of "reading"?
May very well have been on her Chromebook, not necessarily the Promethean board. Neither is going away.
How is there not more outrage about this?
Anonymous wrote:How else can I show the kids banned books?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning my 6 yo asked me if she could "watch" a book that she had "watched" in school. We happened to have the actual book at home, but when I read it, she said the "real" book has sound effects.
Is there any chance of getting rid of these giant screens or at least avoiding having kids regularly watch videos under the guise of "reading"?
May very well have been on her Chromebook, not necessarily the Promethean board. Neither is going away.
How is there not more outrage about this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The MCCPTA passed a resolution asking MCPS to do a better job of balancing screen time in 2023: https://www.thesentinel.com/communities/first-parent-led-digital-balance-resolution-in-the-u-s-passed-in-montgomery-county/article_6a1ba696-a9a4-11ed-b5ae-bf5c1ff75c5f.html
MCPS has summarily ignored it. Which tells you how little power the MCCPTA actually wields.
MCCPTA has never "wielded" any power. PTAs have never had any power.
Anonymous wrote:The MCCPTA passed a resolution asking MCPS to do a better job of balancing screen time in 2023: https://www.thesentinel.com/communities/first-parent-led-digital-balance-resolution-in-the-u-s-passed-in-montgomery-county/article_6a1ba696-a9a4-11ed-b5ae-bf5c1ff75c5f.html
MCPS has summarily ignored it. Which tells you how little power the MCCPTA actually wields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning my 6 yo asked me if she could "watch" a book that she had "watched" in school. We happened to have the actual book at home, but when I read it, she said the "real" book has sound effects.
Is there any chance of getting rid of these giant screens or at least avoiding having kids regularly watch videos under the guise of "reading"?
May very well have been on her Chromebook, not necessarily the Promethean board. Neither is going away.