jbjennings
Captain
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2007
- Messages
- 3,903
Re: Kid screamed for his cell phone back
Kid screamed for his cell phone back???
My what stories a teacher could tell!
Parents would do well for themselves to "help out" in the classroom for a couple of days and see what really happens at school and what teachers really deal with.
The policy in my area is, the phones can be brought to school/class but must be off during school hours but can be used after school for calling home, etc. If it rings in class, it's taken, the parent is notified, the student's name is put on the phone, time it's taken from the student, date, reason for taking it, and must be taken to the office by an adult. The phone is given back in 3 or 5 days, I can't remember which. Most of the time when it rings in class it's an accident, but some of the sneaky phone "chatters" have ringtones now that are imperceptible by most adults because the pitch is outside "old folks" hearing capability. You can't use good judgement on whether to cut 'em some slack in the case of an accidental call because parents don't trust a teacher's judgement anymore and will claim "unfairness". So you have to be ultra-consistent on everything that you do discipline-wise.
JBJ
Kid screamed for his cell phone back???
My what stories a teacher could tell!
Parents would do well for themselves to "help out" in the classroom for a couple of days and see what really happens at school and what teachers really deal with.
The policy in my area is, the phones can be brought to school/class but must be off during school hours but can be used after school for calling home, etc. If it rings in class, it's taken, the parent is notified, the student's name is put on the phone, time it's taken from the student, date, reason for taking it, and must be taken to the office by an adult. The phone is given back in 3 or 5 days, I can't remember which. Most of the time when it rings in class it's an accident, but some of the sneaky phone "chatters" have ringtones now that are imperceptible by most adults because the pitch is outside "old folks" hearing capability. You can't use good judgement on whether to cut 'em some slack in the case of an accidental call because parents don't trust a teacher's judgement anymore and will claim "unfairness". So you have to be ultra-consistent on everything that you do discipline-wise.
JBJ