Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Parents need to be coming for their own screens and the ones they give to kids. That would do much more than trying to come for screens in schools. Try convincing parents that their precious 5th and 6th graders don't need phones.
I can and do control the screens in my home. Can't control other parents but teachers can set a good example instead of a bad one. Take some responsibility for the addictive devices you require students to use ffs
The point of this post was not the addictive device it was using Google docs for essentially texting. Which is no different than kids passing notes/drawings and spreading secrets and rumors that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Parents need to be coming for their own screens and the ones they give to kids. That would do much more than trying to come for screens in schools. Try convincing parents that their precious 5th and 6th graders don't need phones.
I can and do control the screens in my home. Can't control other parents but teachers can set a good example instead of a bad one. Take some responsibility for the addictive devices you require students to use ffs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
I don’t think they are. When our magnet had Open House, parents were on their phones continuously. My students, in contrast, used pencil and paper to complete an assignment. They aren’t the ones addicted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Parents need to be coming for their own screens and the ones they give to kids. That would do much more than trying to come for screens in schools. Try convincing parents that their precious 5th and 6th graders don't need phones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ha! This is such old news. My high school junior did this in 3rd grade.. When I realized how much of his day was wasted goofing around on a Chromebook, I enrolled him in private school that used textbooks and workbooks. They actually went through each textbook and workbook cover to cover sequentially so it was so easy to know what your child was studying and what they were going to study next. It was a religious school but it was the cheapest private school we could find near us and we aren’t even religious.
Best thing ever for him to spend 4th-8th grade at a school with very little technology and where phones were banned except from when the final bell rang to 10 minutes after pickup so students could connect with parents picking up or letting parents know if they were staying for aftercare. Any other time any adult saw a phone it was immediately confiscated.
They really need to bring back textbooks and workbooks! It is so much easier to track assignments and tell how much work your child is doing in class.
Textbooks and workbooks are great for the average student, but don’t work for most MCPS classrooms where differentiation is required. It negatively impacts the advanced learners as much as the student who is struggling. Purely from the standpoint of a teacher whose rosters are 25% twice exceptional learners, textbooks and workbooks would not serve a quarter of my students. Those students would be visually singled out with photocopied classwork while everyone else worked in a bound copy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Parents need to be coming for their own screens and the ones they give to kids. That would do much more than trying to come for screens in schools. Try convincing parents that their precious 5th and 6th graders don't need phones.
My 8th grader still doesn't have a phone. Im fighting with him for the school chromebook too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.
Parents need to be coming for their own screens and the ones they give to kids. That would do much more than trying to come for screens in schools. Try convincing parents that their precious 5th and 6th graders don't need phones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think some parent are going to have to realize that with technology comes problems and some just aren't worth coming up with a bunch of interventions.
Kids used to pass paper notes in class. Or whisper in each others ear. Every generation comes up with a way to communicate during class when they are not supposed to be.
OP your kid is now a 4th grader. I'm sure this came as a surprise to you but welcome to parenting someone who is no longer a small child and growing up. Take a deep breath, because the ride gets more bumpy from here.
Math and literacy rates have been dropping every year since the introduction of smartphones and edtech so yes, parents are coming for your screens.