Classic!I had a parent ask if her son could have his detention moved to a “lunch detention” so he wouldn’t miss football practice. Internally I just thought “hey, why are you giving up such a great teaching opportunity”.
Yes, that kid is constantly in trouble but his parents don’t really see the big deal. He’s passing his classes…
For sure...Most kids like most parents lean towards the "good" side.We did forget to mention these kids. We have a lot of great kids who come from bad or even non-existent parents. There are tons of them. These are self-reliant kids.
We use the caddies. BUT, remember, burner phones aren't just for drug dealers.This is cool and we have phone caddies here, but it really doesn't matter if the kid won't actually use it.
Hot teacher take: Asking a student to put a phone in the phone caddie is no different than simply asking the kid to keep their phone in their pocket.We use the caddies. BUT, remember, burner phones aren't just for drug dealers.
I crack up when I walk by the phone caddies and see an old flip phone in a pouch. You know that is a fake one.
This is cool and we have phone caddies here, but it really doesn't matter if the kid won't actually use it.
Seems the same to me!Hot teacher take: Asking a student to put a phone in the phone caddie is no different than simply asking the kid to keep their phone in their pocket.
Change my mind....
My school district requires middle school students to keep phones in their lockers; school board policy. Any phone seen by a teacher is turned into the office.A friend of mine's kid is going to a Catholic high school next year that just instituted mandatory phone caddie policy. We'll see how that goes.
Another friend of mine taught physics at that same school back when they had a no phones in class policy that some kids simply ignored. He got tired of being the enforcer every day and just gave up.
My understanding is that it's often the parents who protest the No Phone policies the loudest, because they believe they should be able to get ahold of their kids 24/7.
Yeah, I have heard that from parents or from students before.A friend of mine's kid is going to a Catholic high school next year that just instituted mandatory phone caddie policy. We'll see how that goes.
Another friend of mine taught physics at that same school back when they had a no phones in class policy that some kids simply ignored. He got tired of being the enforcer every day and just gave up.
My understanding is that it's often the parents who protest the No Phone policies the loudest, because they believe they should be able to get ahold of their kids 24/7.
Yeah, pretty much the same. They can have them at lunch though.My school district requires middle school students to keep phones in their lockers; school board policy. Any phone seen by a teacher is turned into the office.
For the most part it works, no phones are out. But I know kids have them in their pockets. It's just less likely they will get them out if they know their will be consequences.
Prove you’re a hot teacher.Hot teacher take: Asking a student to put a phone in the phone caddie is no different than simply asking the kid to keep their phone in their pocket.
Change my mind....