The findings come from the Pew Research Center, which surveyed 5,110 US adults. The results show that 68% of respondents supported a ban on middle and high school students using phones in the classroom, while 24% opposed the idea and 8% were unsure.
- deegeese ( @deegeese@sopuli.xyz ) 7•2 days ago
I think the old etiquette rules are the same as they were when our grandparents were in school.
Making a phone call during class is extremely rude, but students have a legitimate need to make phone calls outside of class, which is why high schools used to have pay phones.
- 93maddie94 ( @93maddie94@lemm.ee ) 2•1 day ago
The issue is kids aren’t making phone calls in class. They’re on social media. They’re listening to music. It’s usually not obvious and disruptive to others, but still impacting their ability to focus and learn. Banning them outright causes kids to be sneaky and resentful, but allowing them can be detrimental, especially with the impacts on mental health. If you collect them before class (I’ve seen teachers use shoe holders hanging on the door) kids will bring in an old phone and turn in that. If you use the locked bags, same deal. If you scramble the service so they phones are unusable then you can run into issues in a real emergency.
- Lime Buzz ( @SweetCitrusBuzz@beehaw.org ) English5•1 day ago
Phones are the way a lot of students learn and focus nowadays.
They shouldn’t be taken away, lest their ability to do those things drop.
- suburban_hillbilly ( @suburban_hillbilly@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 day ago
This is the rule at my kids school. It looks fine on paper, but in practice there is no respect for sometimes rules for many adoledcents.