Phones are distracting students in class. More states are pressing schools to ban them::Kids are on their phones in classrooms across American, even when school rules forbid it. More states want to ban them.
On one hand this makes perfect sense, on the other I wonder if kids will be more likely to be distracted by their guns if they aren’t distracted by their phones.
“Let’s get started. Guns away please.”
Seems like we need to educate kids on dealing with such things.
Which starts at home. Parents need to lead by example, to begin with, then actively teach kids about using distractive technology, laying ground rules, while also teaching about using the internet safely (including privacy and security).
Having this be part of schooling, at every grade level, would be a good thing too. But we know that will be a cluster fuck too.
I’m surprised they weren’t banned from the get-go
Our district bans them in middle school and leaves policy to each teacher in HS.
Maybe they should ban phones at work too lol
No phones on in classrooms during class. What parent would not be on board?
Helicopter parents
They were. When I was in school having a smartphone out could result in it being taken away. At some point since then, the rules have seemingly changed.
Because phones got expensive. If a teacher confiscates a phone and drops it/it gets stolen from them, who’s going to pay for it? At least that’s the explanation my teachers gave around 2010 or so, when they announced they’d no longer confiscate phones.
Parents lose their minds if they can’t contact their child at any moment. Some schools/teachers ban them already but I imagine some PTA meetings about this will be total shitshows.
And rightfully so! Every student in school died horribly before cell phones existed.
So much dysentery…
It was Malaria that took me out, and she wasn’t a fun date, lemme tell ya.
Ahh yes, not all the kids died, therefore emergencies don’t happen. Okay then.
It’s as if the universe didn’t exist seventeen years ago to these people.
I mean…American schools do have somewhat of a reputation… I can kinda see why parents would want their child to be able to contact them in an emergency.
I suppose I’d be worried, too, if I was sending my kids to a war zone on a daily basis.
Back to using old-school tech to pass messages in class.
Yeah texting
Do you like me?
[ ] Yes
[ ] No
Just doesn’t have the same appeal as pencil/paper
"Do you like me? Reply YES or NO. To opt out of future advances text OPT OUT to 84033. This message was sent from A Crush at no cost, but your network may charge you for SMS services. Please check with your network provider for more information about charges for intra-classroom messaging.
It’s pretty normal here that you’re not allowed to use your phone in class. I think that’s the case in every school here.
The door cubby thing seems like a perfectly fine solution. Kids still have phones to be able to coordinate with parents, but aren’t distracted in class.
I don’t know how I feel about this. I think to some extent, it’s again trying to do the wrong thing. Instead of banning phones, like for years they banned calculators, perhaps they should be teaching skills around time management, how to configure the phones to be less disruptive for set periods or all the time, and the like. It’s not like people at work don’t have phones in most work environments. It’s not like most people lock up their phones when they’re at home.
Instead of pretending that we can “go back in time” to teach kids, we should look to teaching skills kids will obviously need. I remember being taught to balance a check book in 1997 or so, roughly a year or two before I never used a check in daily life, and the less than one time a year I needed one, I didn’t really have to do any “balancing” cause I can do a single subtraction for the day or 3 till it was updated in my online bank account anyway.
Teaching kids stuff sans smartphones is like teaching kids sans books, the schools just haven’t accepted it yet. And to all those who are like - well, what if your smartphone dies, or is lost, etc. Well, what if your car dies? You do the same thing, you have a backup plan, but that plan isn’t to go back to walking or horses.
The other argument I can foresee is “kids won’t learn anything”. This has always been a problem for some kids, and phones aren’t the cause. For everyone else, you get out of school what you put into it. Maybe some kids can be shown by teachers why learning is important and they’ll be self motivated - in which case phones are a net good. The solution to learning isn’t to torture kids who don’t see any point in it. It’s like you never screwed around or just slept in class… You don’t need a phone to not learn stuff is all I’m saying.
The important thing is to teach people how to teach themselves. At work I’m always asked to figure stuff out. Nothing I do today has much if anything to do with what I learned in high school or college. No one asks me to do calculus, or the details of the war of 1812. I’m solving problems using my phone or computer and the internet. As soon as you’re in a job, all these sorts of restrictions tend to go away in the vast majority of cases.
Worrying how many people are okay with taking away rights from people just because they haven’t existed for a certain number of years yet. No one would dream of forcefully taking away adults’ phones.