ChatterBank4 mins ago
Mobile phones in schools
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No best answer has yet been selected by Andy008. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We were amazed to find that our Granddaughters school allowed mobile phones & that the pupils didn't have to hand them in at reception. They were of course, instructed to turn them off.
After putting a mobile phone on her 'wish list' she received one for Christmas. After the Christmas break, she took it to school, switched it off, inadvertently left it her blazer pocket & hung it up on her peg. When she went to collect her blazer the phone had disappeared! The thief was never caught & it eventually cost another �85 to replace it.
So you are right AndyH - mobile phones in schools don't mix!
This is one subject that has the red mist rising up before my eyes! I work in a school (approx 900 pupils) and mobile phones ARE allowed. I would guess that 95% of the kids bring them to school and it is a nightmare. If one of them is caught texting in a lesson and the teacher tries to confiscate it, all hell breaks loose with the student screaming about his/her rights and then irate parents arrive or phone, also screaming about the rights of their little darling. If a member of staff does anything 'amusing' like tripping on steps or dropping books/paperwork you can guarantee at least half a dozen students will have taken a pic of it on their phone. Students are told individually when entering the hall to sit their GCSE's that mobile phones are specifically NOT allowed but even this does not stop them. Last year one boy was half way through his GCSE English when his mother phoned him to ask how he was getting on!!! Needless to say the invigilator took his exam paper from him and ripped it up if front of him. No doubt the same thing will happen again this year.
I could continue for hours on this subject but I think I'll go lie down in a darkened room with a stiff gin & tonic instead.