• computerfan0
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    4311 months ago

    As a school student in a school where phones are banned, I think this is a bad idea. The ban achieves 2 things for me:

    1. Making it harder to check a fact or figure quickly.

    2. Preventing me from listening to music, playing games or browsing the web uring lunch break.

    It DOES NOT stop me from becoming disengaged from the class! If I’m bored, I’ll look out the window, play with a calculator or something similar. And of course the ban hasn’t stopped many students using phones anyway. Maybe phone bans don’t solve the issue of uninteresting classes after all?

      • computerfan0
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        1211 months ago

        We don’t have those kind of calculators in the schools here. I just do the old-fashioned “input random sums and see what the calculator says”.

      • @snowbell@beehaw.org
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        111 months ago

        Oh, Block Dude. There is a blast from the past. Modern TI calculators can run emulators. What a time to be alive.

    • gnzl
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      711 months ago

      Well, you can fact check later right? If nothing else kids will learn to be bored again, which is good.

  • BuxtonWater
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    4111 months ago

    Yeah good luck with that… Even if it was agreed upon it is effectively unenforceable without resorting to essentially temporary theft as we see today, causing the students to hide their phones even better.

    • EamonnMR
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      1811 months ago

      If students hide their phones instead of being distracted by them, isn’t that mission accomplished?

      • CMLVI
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        2711 months ago

        As previous student who was in school when cell phones blew up in usage, I wasn’t not preoccupied by my phone because I had to keep it hidden. I was preoccupied with keeping it hidden so I could keep using it. Texting with T9 without looking was a breeze. The only thing that slowed my usage was the fact I only had like 500 texts a month allotted to me.

        Making the kids hide it won’t make them less distracted. They just become distracted by hiding the phone. I feel like you’d almost have to just ban phones entirely, which today is pretty impractical.

      • BuxtonWater
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        11 months ago

        Not really, they’re still using them. Just not as obviously. They’d be even more distracted trying to hide it and focus on everything at the same time.

    • conciselyverbose
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      2411 months ago

      Confiscating banned items is not theft. They are fully and unconditionally entitled to remove distractions and your kid absolutely does not and cannot have a right to have a phone in class.

      • Pigeon
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        2011 months ago

        The absolute last thing I want to do these days is to try to remove kids’ ability to call for help in emergencies.

        Phones are also important so that kids can receive emergency alerts, like earthquake and tsunami and tornado alerts, depending on where you live. Such emergency alert systems provide only a little bit of warning, but that can make all the difference.

        You think it should be disallowed even in cases like the one described, so a parent can tell their kid pickup will be late or to catch a ride with a particular trusted adult or to walk to xyz place to wait, etc?

        And they can be used to help academics, too, such as for taking notes, recording lectures (when allowed), looking up an unfamiliar word (especially for kids whose first language isn’t whatever they’re being taught in), taking photos of the whiteboard. And more and more, boosted by LLM tech, they’re becoming helpful for things like live translation and auto-transcription (great for deaf or hard of hearing students especially, but also just for anyone who finds subtitles make audio easier to follow along with, as many people apparently do).

        A school can tell kids to mute phones, and not to look at them during class (and that part’s hardly new - even before phones it was games on calculators and books and magazines and passing notes), but taking them or even forcing them to be turned off (except perhaps during tests) is too much imo. Especially when kids will absolutely bring them in anyway, and the whole thing will just create more of an us vs. them dynamic with the teachers and students. And especially now that phones have become such personal devices for so many people, like an external brain filled with your secrets.

        • conciselyverbose
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          2411 months ago

          Kids have no need for any of those. There is an adult in charge who is responsible for emergency situations.

          Yes, it absolutely should be unconditionally banned in the classroom, with substantial disciplinary action for the first offense. No, the example they gave is not even sort of a justification. Anything that results in the student leaving early goes through the office, and nothing that doesn’t result in them leaving early can possibly require them to have a phone during the day.

          No, a phone is absolutely not a tool in the classroom. It is a massive distraction. The idea of using the absolutely disgusting shitshow that is modern LLM tech in an educational setting is even more disgusting and anti-learning. Students that need accommodations should be getting actual accommodations, not a cheap facsimile that make it impossible for a class to function because of the massive distraction.

          You should absolutely not be permitted to have a phone on your person in a classroom setting before college, let alone to interact with it.

          • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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            1211 months ago

            There is an adult in charge who is responsible for emergency situations.

            How can you say that with a straight face after seeing all the horror stories of kids with special needs having those needs blatantly ignored by school staff?

          • Jojo-Mcfrost572
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            811 months ago

            Here’s a quick lil story fir ya.

            Our teachers refused to listen to us while the school burned. Refused to look out of the window and see the actual fire. These people are in charge of your children.

            Kids should have phones. Teachers are there to reach and that’s it. They aren’t pious perfect creations. Phones are a great safety net that we didn’t have when I was in school.

            I walked past my teacher and out of the school as it was burning. Teachers should not have final day in anything. They are there to teach and nothing else. I’d rather my kid grew up to understand they have final day in their life and can walk out of situations they cause them harm.

        • @ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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          1511 months ago

          Surface level I agreed but thinking more on it I don’t.

          Emergencies and early pickups should be the responsibility of the adults i.e. teachers and administrative staff. They are responsible for you while in school so they need to be informed either way.

          Late pickups can be discovered when the school day is over and they get their phone back / access to it.

          Learning tool for people with disabilities? No they should get real/proper tools and help/assistance. Not just a free pass to use their own smartphone. Not everyone can afford one good enough to be of much help.

          Photos of the whiteboard sure but I think that falls on the teacher that they need to have that and being able to hand it out. They could of course take a picture themself and print it/photocopy.

          As for laws for if they can take them that is of course needed if they are to be banned properly.

          I don’t think it creates and us vs them if it’s not on the teachers to enforce it. Place the task on non-teacher staff and have reasonable punishments for trying to avoid the ban and it will work to ban them.

          • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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            811 months ago

            Emergencies and early pickups should be the responsibility of the adults i.e. teachers and administrative staff. They are responsible for you while in school so they need to be informed either way.

            Learning tool for people with disabilities? No they should get real/proper tools and help/assistance.

            The real world doesn’t work that way. Horror stories abound of school staff blatantly ignoring students’ special needs.

            • @ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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              511 months ago

              And that problem is of infinitely higher priority than banning phones in school 100%. Allowing phones is not a solution to that very real problem.

              • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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                11 months ago

                Let’s review the available options here:

                1. Allow phones in school. This partially mitigates the problem by allowing neglected children to call for help.
                2. Don’t allow phones in school. This does not at all mitigate the problem; neglected children remain helpless.

                There is no third option of solving the problem of children being neglected in schools. That would require people who don’t care to magically start caring, which obviously isn’t going to happen.

                Therefore, the greatest harm reduction is achieved through option 1.

                • @ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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                  611 months ago

                  I strongly disagree. Option one is just giving up on trying to improve the situation in our schools. You’re not listening here. “Not caring” as you put it either is or should be neglect in terms of performing their job and thus grounds for dismissal. Then you’ll say “but no one wants to teach anyway, there’s a shortage as is” and I’ll say that yeah, that’s another more important issue, that teachers need better working conditions and pay.

                  That there exists more important issues to fix doesn’t mean that banning phones isn’t a good idea, it just means that there are prerequisites before it would actually work “in the real world” as you put it.

      • @FlickOfTheBean@beehaw.org
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        611 months ago

        Does not sure. Cannot though… How does that work? What’s so imperative that it warrants cutting off communication for this person’s daughter? Like I get telling a kid to wait till in between classes to check, but “cannot have” the right? Why?

        Even I think this is a bit pedantic, but it feels like you’re using the word cannot for an odd authority grab, and I don’t understand it, so I figured I’d question it at the very least

        • conciselyverbose
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          1011 months ago

          The school has an obligation to educate students to the best of their ability.

          Allowing any student to have a phone for any reason is an abdication of that responsibility.

          • @FlickOfTheBean@beehaw.org
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            711 months ago

            Ah ok, that’s true, that is their responsibility to educate the students. I’d also say it’s their responsibility to provide reasonable accommodations to in demand constituent methods of communication.

            So how is allowing a kid checking a phone between classes and having it put away in a locker (so not on their person) during class the school abdicating it’s educational responsibility?

            (This specific case is my own “reasonable accommodation” theory, so I’m really curious about genuine counterpoints to this that aren’t just devil’s advocate, and you really seem to believe this, so thank you for your input so far, it is appreciated)

            • conciselyverbose
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              711 months ago

              I have no issue with it being in a locker. I have an issue with it being in a classroom.

              Let’s be real for a minute. Most employers can’t realistically ban adults from having personal cell phones on them, so it’s just a tolerated intrusion, but the vast majority of adults can’t be trusted to use their phones responsibly when they should be being productive. Kids are much worse, and they also desperately need the enforced long focus sessions without the distraction of cell phones in order to have their brains develop properly. As vulnerable as adults are to the extremely powerful habit-forming nature of modern technology, kids are even more exposed, because their brains are more adaptable and because they don’t have the same body of work to fall back on.

              • @FlickOfTheBean@beehaw.org
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                311 months ago

                Ahhh this is a case of I misread one of your posts it seems.

                Yeah your stance seems reasonable enough to me with that clarification.

                I don’t really know about the long focus sessions being necessary for proper brain development (social conditioning seems to be more the point of that) but I’m not an expert here, so I am not going to trust my gut on this one. (In the effort of reigning in my pedantism, I’m not going to ask the definition of proper development either lol)

                In any case, ty for the conversation!

                • conciselyverbose
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                  511 months ago

                  It’s not that their brain explodes or anything.

                  But focus and attention span are skills that need to be practiced to be developed. If you never get that practice, the scope of problems you’re able to solve shrinks substantially, because a lot of big problems need sustained attention to make a real dent in. Coming in from a lateral angle with ideas from other areas are great, and a lot of problems are solved that way, but you need to be immersed in the problem space at some point before you get that stroke of insight.

                  You need to be able to sustain attention, though, and that takes practice.

          • @Fylkir@lemmy.sdf.org
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            311 months ago

            The school has an obligation to educate students to the best of their ability.

            Good luck enforcing that.

    • @echo@sopuli.xyz
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      1111 months ago

      It’s not like this situation was unmanageable before kids had cell phones. You call the school and they relay it to the kid.

  • @shirro@aussie.zone
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    11 months ago

    Phones like vapes in schools are there so businesses can profit by exploiting kids. The device hardware is powerful and potentially useful with the right software but the most popular apps are generally exploitative and potentially dangerous to mental health and privacy and because the industry uses dark patterns based on gambling to drive up engagement they are a distraction and reduce attention.

    My kids have a lot of access to technology and the Internet at home. I am not opposed to them having phones when they show the right level of maturity and demonstrate a real need but they don’t need them in class. Their school has had a phone policy for a long time which I support. Kids should have the freedom to be themselves at school and make mistakes without them being captured and spread via mobile devices.

  • @The_Terrible_Humbaba@beehaw.org
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    2011 months ago

    I can easily go without using my phone for extended periods of time, and always have been. I’ve never really been “phone addicted”, and never used my phone during class - despite having one for the entirety of my school years.

    That still never stopped me from not paying any attention in class. Drawing on a book/desk, talking to the person next to me, looking out the window, or just spending time with my imagination were things I did too often, and I never needed a phone for any of it.

    I seriously doubt banning phones would make much of a difference, other than pissing plenty of kids off. You’re essentially being forced to go to a place, every day, where you will be stripped of your personal belongings and are not allowed to be in contact with the outside world.

    • @Sentinian@lemmy.one
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      1311 months ago

      This was my experience with schooling as well. Sure I had my phone but it wasn’t what I needed to lose focus. The issue is how school is taught. I’ve had classes where I’m so focused and invested because of the professor and content. My mind wouldn’t even think about being bored. But some professors are honestly shit and don’t engage enough. Couple that with the general school environment and boom nobody wants to be there.

      • computerfan0
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        311 months ago

        That’s my exact experience too. My school already bans phones, but that hasn’t stopped me staring out the window or just sitting there and thinking to myself. A phone would be an improvement as I’d at least have a chance of looking up something relevant to what the teacher’s saying.

  • @Levsgetso@lemmy.zip
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    2011 months ago

    Phone bad!!! But jokes aside phones are not the problem, the students don’t need a phone to distract themselves from studying. Banning them won’t solve a problem it would just be tach illiterate 60 year old padding themselves on the back for „getting those evil phones out of the classroom”.

  • @loops@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    I use my phone/laptop a lot in class too look things up. Like finding gifs of the stages of a beating heart, and generally, reading about the same topic being covered by the professor, but explained differently. It helps tremendously. That being said, there are certainly other people in any class that are on tiktok or whatever else and those people wouldn’t pay attention with or without their phones. Take their phones away and they’ll just distract themselves with something else. They don’t want to be there and taking their phones away won’t fix that; it will probably just make it worse.

    This reminds me of the idea that violent video games causes violence; which they do, but only in people that are pre-disposed to behaving violently; and in those cases they’re violent with or without the video games. It’s the same with smart phones. They’ll only distract people that are already going to be distracted. It’s just a matter of what they’re going to be distracted by.

    The onus instead should lie with how the classes are delivered, and tangentially, how the entire system itself is funded.

    • @wim@lemmy.sdf.org
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      11 months ago

      I’m not convinced. I think a lot more people are susceptible to getting distracted than there are susceptible to extreme acts of violence.

      Your stated good use cases can easily be performed after/outside of classes. And I would say in this day and age should be part of assignments/homework/studying in high school level education to guide and educate young people in filtering, identifying and assessing source materials better. But that’s asking a lot from teachers, who are not experts at this, either.

      I don’t see how any of this discussion relates to funding though.

      • @loops@beehaw.org
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        211 months ago

        imo with better funding teachers would have more drive and ability to create a better learning environment for their students, excluding outliers of course.

        The good use cases is my personal experience, and it does not help as much outside of class when I’m reading a textbook or doing homework. It’s exponentially better for me to look this stuff up in real time when the teacher’s talking about it. It helps me visualize.

        I think a lot more people are susceptible to getting distracted than there are susceptible to extreme acts of violence.

        That is certainly true. I wasn’t saying anything on the contrary; merely comparing them since they are similar from psychology perspective.

  • bedrooms
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    1711 months ago

    Can they ban politicians from requiring tablets as an education tool? I don’t see the point. If anything, they should use a computer instead. There’s no point using a gadget sub-optimal for anything active learning.

  • @Sentinian@lemmy.one
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    1411 months ago

    I understand the logic that UNESCO is trying to make. However instead of a global ban on the device itself, ban the addictive parts of it. TikTok and most other corporate social media are designed to keep everyone, kids and adults alike as addicted to the platform as possible. Phones are still a valuable resource for a student, including being able to call in the event of an emergency or having access to maps or other things.

    Ban the actual evil on the phones, not the phones themselves

    • Pigeon
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      611 months ago

      Tiktok actually has (or had, last I looked at it) a lot of value for marginalized groups finding content made by and for each other. I used it for a while before the ads got to be too much, and I had NEVER seen so many regular trans and nonbinary and ace and aro people getting to talk to each other about whatever instead of only about gender and orientation (and seeing them existing as regular people in video form is just really fucking comforting if you’re not around others like you in real life), nor so many informative videos by and about disabled folks. T

      he platform has (had?) an incredible ability to enable discovery of niche communities, and I rapidly learned a hell of a lot about accessibility (from videos by actual disabled people about their struggles and solutions and day to day lives), about modern Native American cultures (especially there were a lot of Native American amateur comedians that were very funny) and concerns (f the pipeline), about ex-mormon experiences, about autistic people (yes, there’s a lot of misinformation on tiktok about neurodivergence, but there’s ALSO a lot of actual neurodivergent people talking about what their day to day experiences are actually like in a way that’s really damn hard to find in other places that are dominated by Doctors and parent-directed articles), and people/culture from India (before India banned Tiktok), and so on and on, that I wouldn’t have learned about otherwise.

      And there were more successful female and Black comedians than I’ve ever seen elsewhere. I had more videos by Black people and Asian people and women then I’ve ever even come close to having in my youtube feed; it’s not even comparable in that respect, really.

      All of which long-winded paragraphs is to say, don’t ban Tiktok, or other specific platforms. Especially not when the bills that are ostensibly to do that hand absurd amounts of power to government to do the same to future platforms with little to no oversight and with little to no justification. And more platforms just like them will crop up out of the ashes anyways.

      Instead, ban individually-personalized advertising, aka the root motivator that makes companies want to peel every scrap of information out of their users in the first place.

      Individually targeted advertising hasn’t been a thing for that long, even though it feels so ubiquitous and unstoppable now, and for decades companies did just fine with population-level targeting like newspaper ads used to be.

      I don’t think the individualized ad targeting has added anything of value to society.


      Having typed all that, I re-read your comment and, yeah, I suppose schools could at least block social media sites on their school wifi. That can only do so much when they’ve all got data connections anyways, though.

      Anyway I agree that phones shouldn’t be banned. It’s infeasible, inadvisable, and counterproductive.

      • @amanneedsamaid@sopuli.xyz
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        11 months ago

        Despite all those positives, the foundation of the platform is built in an abusive, addictive way. We shouldn’t ban any social media applications, we should regulate them to end their abbhorent practices / business models. I totally agree that we should ban targetted advertising, although there is a good middleground solution as well: banning targetted advertising which relies on cloud-based AI. If recommendation algorithms could run locally on your phone, with a way to validate everything is processed locally, you could keep the modern formula for social media while simultaneously maintaining privacy. I would imagine the suggestions would become more primitive to account for the extra processing power, but at least people can continue to doomscroll if they’d like. My idea applies better to post recommendations than advertising, but if ad recommendations could be kept anonymous (the entire system would need to be open source), you could have a privacy-respecting service AND tailored feeds / advertising.

        Regulate Social Media (including domestic corporations) > Ban Social Media > The Current Situation, imo.

      • @Sentinian@lemmy.one
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        211 months ago

        I appreciate your comment. I have personally avoided tiktok due to other parts of the internet (as well as coworkers and friends) portrayal of it. However you shed some light into things I would actually find value in as a person. I do see this sense of community as very good thing. My concern is more on the side of how addicted one can get to it, but I assume if it is giving them a community they never had, is it a bad thing?

        I actually quite like your conclusion. Targeted ads have added nothing of value to the common person. I guess it also is part of the reason I blame the addictive nature of these apps, they want you addicted to show ads and make money.

    • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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      411 months ago

      However instead of a global ban on the device itself, ban the addictive parts of it.

      There is no way to do that without giving the school remote control over the phone, which would be a security and privacy violation.

      • @Sentinian@lemmy.one
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        311 months ago

        I was moreso referring to dealing with the dark patterns that apps use in general, not the school doing that.

    • @monobot@lemmy.ml
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      211 months ago

      I was with you until “TikTok and most other corporate social media”. It is all other" parts of internet that are not allowed for 13 year olds.

      • @Sentinian@lemmy.one
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        211 months ago

        I would assume the average school child is more concerned about instagram or tiktok vs other parts of the internet. I would not be against finding a way to limit access to other sites, but I would prefer a privacy respecting way. Just requiring an ID is a shitty solution and screws over adults more then it helps kids (they will find grandma’s id.) If a privacy valuing solution is brought up I would be 1000% supporting it.

        • @monobot@lemmy.ml
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          211 months ago

          I think trchnical solution is not s problem, if we decide what needs to be applied we can do it.

          If kid finds grandmother’s id - it is simple enough, punish grandma for providing her id, it will teach adult to be responsible. Additionally, not all kids will be able to do it. I doubt they will follow us.

          My opinion, eve if it is obvious, parents are responsible Punish them for not protecting their kids.

        • @ArcticCircleSystem@beehaw.org
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          211 months ago

          Wouldn’t that effectively restrict a lot of platforms to people age 16 or older? I am a bit worried that such an id law could cut off younger queer teens dealing with abuse that’s severe enough to qualify as abuse in the academic sense, but not in the eyes of the law, from vital community… ~Strawberry

  • som
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    1311 months ago

    they give 0 thoughts to what they say or are they just idiots?

      • som
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        811 months ago

        “Those students who use tablets and computers very often tend to do worse than those who use them moderately,” he adds.

        This is from your article and I could have saved them the money of doing this research. Also this is tablets not phones. They are allowed phones. You know why? because even they understand not everyone can see their house from the classroom window and need to use the phone to communicate.

        Limiting the use during class is all I am in for. Banning it from school is just idiotic.

        Also yes. I do think tech managers in Silicon valley are idiots. The biggest proof of that is we are talki g on lemmy and not reddit.

  • 🦊 OneRedFox 🦊
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    911 months ago

    Would be good for breaking some phone addictions, but good luck to the teachers that will have to deal with the withdrawls of the students.

      • @shirro@aussie.zone
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        11 months ago

        My kids who are now teens had ipod touches practically from birth (we got the first versions of the Ipad, raspberry pi etc). They looked so clever to non-technical people fluidly swiping puzzle pieces around on a screen in a UI language most adults at the time barely understood. Then one day I put a wooden puzzle in front of them and realised their touch puzzle apps lacked several degree of freedom available in the physical world and they didn’t know how to rotate. The physical world is so much richer in many ways and skills learned in it are often more widely applicable.

        It isn’t that technology isn’t valuable and can provide a benefit. It isn’t automatically superior or more complete and some people fetishize it to a ridiculous extent. For decades kids spent a huge amount of time cutting and pasting content into powerpoint in primary schools here at the expense of illustrating, reading and hand writing because companies like Microsoft were engaged in a war for mind share. Most technical people like myself thought this was a very poor use of technology but less technical people probably thought we were luddites. I have seen my kids do animation and story telling with apps that I think is quite a good use of technology but I wouldn’t deny them the experience of doing art with physical materials which I think in most ways is more foundational.

        • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          I have seen my kids do animation and story telling with apps that I think is quite a good use of technology but I wouldn’t deny them the experience of doing art with physical materials which I think in most ways is more foundational.

          This reminds me of a time when I was a kid, drawing something in class, when I started drawing little colored dots, mimicking pixels on a screen. I thought computer graphics was so cool. I still do, but I did then, too!

          I was fortunate that, for their first home computer, my parents sprang for a fancy 486 machine with a graphics card capable of 24-bit color. Thanks to that hardware and various pieces of graphics-related software, I got a solid understanding of pixel graphics and the RGB color system. I also learned fundamentals of graphics programming thanks to QBasic’s built-in support for VGA graphics modes—I’d imagine a shape, then figure out how to teach the computer to draw it using QBasic’s graphics primitives.

          I also had traditional art supplies as a kid, but they went mostly unused. I gravitated hard toward computer graphics. I think it’s because I was fond of pretty lights as a kid, and what’s a computer screen but an array of several million pretty lights?

  • @sanzky@beehaw.org
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    711 months ago

    I hate these kind of discussions. UNESCO released a report of over 400 pages full of research, recommendations, possible outcomes, etc. but here we are discussing just what people think when they hear “ban smartphones”

    • @ailiphiliaOP
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      1311 months ago

      It is doable, but the parents must contribute to that.

      • @money_loo@1337lemmy.com
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        411 months ago

        So literally every one of these technology communities exists just to spread FUD and hate on technology? I can’t find a single one that actually likes tech…ugh.