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  • Ask the readers: phones in class

    February 24, 2009

    Since I got an Android phone for Christmas, I’ve been yammering to anyone who will listen about how cell phones are the great technology equalizer — you can use phones to surf the internet, send email, create podcasts, share photos, as well as, you know, talk to people. Even high-end phones are much less expensive than a decent laptop, and they can fit in your pocket.

    Folks in the cell phone industry feel the same way, and that’s why they’d like to see more cell phone use in schools. Matt Richtel of the New York Times deals with the issues of using phones in class in his article, Industry Makes Pitch That Smartphones Belong in Classroom.

    Many educators regard students’ cell phones as mobile alert systems that let the teacher know that a student would like some detention, please. Phones also present problems ranging from cheating to increasing potential distractions in class. However, it’s hard to dispute the capabilities and cost-effectiveness of smart phones, even if the people crowing about them the loudest are doing so out of naked self-interest. The article notes that a few schools have decided to try programs in which students are issued phones for educational purposes, with positive results:

    “Suzette Kliewer, the teacher who administered the Digital Millennial program at Southwest High School in Jacksonville, N.C., said the phones excited her students and made them collaborate and focus on their studies, even outside of school hours. ‘They took average-level kids and made them into honors-level kids,’ she said.

    “But Ms. Kliewer also said that she spent much of her own time at night, and during weekends and holidays, monitoring the students’ phone use and occasionally disconnecting phones remotely when students broke the rules.”

    Another drawback, addressed by education and technology analyst Bill Rust, is that while smart phones can do a lot, the large screens and keyboards found on computers offer an advantage that phones simply can’t overcome. If you’ve ever written a lengthy email on your phone, even if it has a keypad, you know what he means.

    As the benefits of smart phones become more…well, beneficial, will schools loosen their rules on phone usage in class? What’s your school’s cell phone policy? Are you doing anything with phones in class? If that’s not allowed, are you doing anything to try to change the policy? Tell us about it in the comments. -BILL FERRIS

    Industry Makes Pitch That Smartphones Belong in Classroom via the New York Times

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    Ask the readers: phones in class

    • gz205says:
    • February 24th, 2009 at 5:38 pm

    I think that it’s an interesting idea that I’ve never thought about before, to have phones actually used in action in the classroom. I think that it could definitely bring up some problems. Problems such as: surfing inappropriate topics on the internet, chatting with friends, and affordability. I also think that laptops work better because they DO have bigger screens and a keyboard that is more comfortable to use. –and the cell phone policy at my school is that you’re really not allowed to have them visible.

    • Atlantasays:
    • February 24th, 2009 at 8:23 pm

    Our school does indeed ban phones, but I’ve used them in class. I’ve used phone polling with http://polleverywhere.com, pictures with cellphones, and I’ve told students to call the Cathy’s Book number. (That’s an alternate reality game novel.)


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    I think that it’s an interesting idea that I’ve never thought about before, to have phones actually used in action in the classroom. I think that it could definitely bring up some problems. Problems such as: surfing inappropriate topics on the internet, chatting with friends, and affordability. I also think that laptops work better because they DO have bigger screens and a keyboard that is more comfortable to use. –and the cell phone policy at my school is that you’re really not allowed to have them visible.

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