Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.
Same at DC's middle school. It is so so much better. Kids griped for the first week or two and now it is a non-issue. I am seriously surprised at the parental opposition to this here.
Because getting into this dilutes the message that we need to be sending to MCPS - which is, please for the love of GOD, for the sake of ALL students, take away the phones!
Why are you sending a phone to school with your child? Monitor your own kid. With all the school violence phones are important.
Phones cause more violence than they solve. And if there is a shooting, and your kid texts you, what are you going to do? If you text back and the phone lights up and gets her killed, how will you feel? If she misses a direction from a staff member bc she was texting you, and she gets killed, how will you feel?
This “but school shootings!” makes no sense to me. That’s exactly when your kid needs to have situational awareness and not have a distracting, beeping device in their pocket!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.
Same at DC's middle school. It is so so much better. Kids griped for the first week or two and now it is a non-issue. I am seriously surprised at the parental opposition to this here.
Because getting into this dilutes the message that we need to be sending to MCPS - which is, please for the love of GOD, for the sake of ALL students, take away the phones!
Why are you sending a phone to school with your child? Monitor your own kid. With all the school violence phones are important.
Phones cause more violence than they solve. And if there is a shooting, and your kid texts you, what are you going to do? If you text back and the phone lights up and gets her killed, how will you feel? If she misses a direction from a staff member bc she was texting you, and she gets killed, how will you feel?
This “but school shootings!” makes no sense to me. That’s exactly when your kid needs to have situational awareness and not have a distracting, beeping device in their pocket!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.
Same at DC's middle school. It is so so much better. Kids griped for the first week or two and now it is a non-issue. I am seriously surprised at the parental opposition to this here.
Because getting into this dilutes the message that we need to be sending to MCPS - which is, please for the love of GOD, for the sake of ALL students, take away the phones!
Why are you sending a phone to school with your child? Monitor your own kid. With all the school violence phones are important.
Anonymous wrote:Presentation on the Away All Day pilot was presented in today's BOE meeting:
Anonymous wrote:Presentation on the Away All Day pilot was presented in today's BOE meeting:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.
Same at DC's middle school. It is so so much better. Kids griped for the first week or two and now it is a non-issue. I am seriously surprised at the parental opposition to this here.
Because getting into this dilutes the message that we need to be sending to MCPS - which is, please for the love of GOD, for the sake of ALL students, take away the phones!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.
Same at DC's middle school. It is so so much better. Kids griped for the first week or two and now it is a non-issue. I am seriously surprised at the parental opposition to this here.
Anonymous wrote:It is illegal to confiscate private property. These busy bodies need to mind their beeswax!
Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do substitite teachers enforce no phones? Or are they also using theirs when they sub?
Probably not but this gives them something to do. These days education is a low priority compared to punishing kids and making schools more prison like.
Anonymous wrote:It is illegal to confiscate private property. These busy bodies need to mind their beeswax!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is on the phone at BCC throughout the day. I can see the hours. If she wasnt getting all A's I would take it away. All the kids are on the phones all day.
When I went to back to school night this year, every teacher had a system for putting phones away. It sounds like your kid isn’t following the rules.
This varies by teacher, even in "good" schools. High school kids are all on their phones all day. It is a serious problem and stooping to name calling and parent shaming (see "your kid isn't following the rules") only dilutes our messaging as parents. We need to get phones out of the classrooms. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Admin? Are they on their personal phones during school day? Does the ban or away program apply to them also?
You don’t see the difference between the administration and the kids not having access to phones? Come on.
My kids are at a school with this program and it works fine. Even my kids have said that there is so much less drama than last year. It took all of a week for them to get used to it and it’s a non issue now. I’m glad they are going to Rockville for high school. Kids don’t need access to phones in class. They just don’t.