Yes. Years and years ago I had a truck for sale on consignment at a local used car lot. In the middle of the night the carburetor and other parts were stolen. When the investigation was over they found that it was the car lot owner that had done it.
Many of my students display addictive behaviors regarding their phones, and it has proven detrimental to their learning and social development. Any positive of cell phone use is vastly outweighed by negative consequences.
Long overdue. Students need to focus on being educated in school, not watching videos, playing games, & chatting with each other. Educators and others do not need the distraction that cell cause. If there are emergencies that students need to know about there are other ways for them to find out.
Kids are way too addicted to their phones and it is affecting their learning. Phones could be kept in a basket in the classroom in case of emergency, but definitely NOT with the kid.
My teaching friends say it's been a battle to keep kids off their phones in class and wastes a bunch of class time time addressing this. How will this be enforced any differently though?
There are times that they shouldn't have them but check them at the door of class rooms to cut back on the use. Emergencies do happen and cells are useful
Someone stole the tires and rims off my Toyota pick up.
ReplyYes. Years and years ago I had a truck for sale on consignment at a local used car lot. In the middle of the night the carburetor and other parts were stolen. When the investigation was over they found that it was the car lot owner that had done it.
ReplyI had a stock option wire hub cap taken off my '67 Olds Cutlass convertible. It was irreplaceable.
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