Saturday, March 10, 2007

The Mayor Does Not Reconsider The Ban


Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg insisted that the city would not reconsider the ban on cellphones in the public schools despite a widening outcry from students, parents and public officials.
The mayor's comments, on his weekly radio program, came a day after Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein seemed to suggest to the Daily News editorial board that he would consider a compromise that would allow students to take phones to school, set them aside and get them back at the end of the day. The mayor said: "We are not going to allow iPods and BlackBerrys and cellphones and things that are disruptive in the classroom. Classrooms are for learning. Teachers cannot be expected to look under every kid's desk at what they're doing." The school system has long prohibited students from taking cellphones into schools. But if they did not make or take calls in class, the rule was largely ignored until last month, when the mayor began a program of surprise security sweeps and metal detector scanning to guard against students carrying weapons. Principals sent memos home warning that school safety agents would confiscate cellphones. Angry parents called the phones a vital link to their children. In the past few days the protests escalated. The teachers' union urged that students be allowed to carry phones in school, but not use them. And members of the City Council and Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum opposed the ban. The mayor was dismissive of the teachers' union. "You wonder sometimes whether they're stopping to think," he said. "I think most teachers would argue that there should not be any of these devices." In his meeting with The Daily News, Mr. Klein was quoted as saying that cellphones are "an enormous enforcement issue."

What i Think....


A cell phone is needed in case of any emergencies including ones that are medical. New York City is not the safest city in the world and we must have it in case any type of emergency does occur. We should also be allowed to use any music devices using one will not harm any persons and will also lessen the tension and noise throughout halls in schools more people will be quiet which will lead to less problems occurring.

This cell phone ban is totally unacceptable to me. Without kids being able to have thier cell phones in school they will always be worried about stuff, especially thier parents. I don't agree with the cell phon ban in public schools. I think its a bad idea.

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Parents and Students Fight for their Rights


At a city council hearing where layers introduced a bill about banning on cell phones in NY schools, enforced by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, high school students and their parents spoke out in anger and made quite a scene becausee of the anti-cell phone policy. Angry over the ban in New York escalated recently when Bloomberg introduced metal scanners and random checks at some of the city’s 1,408 public high schools. The new scanners had led to the confiscation of more than 3,000 cell phones and 36 weapons, mostly knives and razor blades. During the hearing, Bloomberg’s representatives said "the policy dated back to a 1988 ban" on pagers and that it is needed in order to prevent students from text messaging each other, taking photographs, surfing the Web and playing video games. They insist that cell phones are a distraction and are used to cheat, take inappropriate photos in bathrooms and organize gang rendezvous. Parents have already written angry letters, e-mails and faxes, staged rallies and news conferences and even threatened to sue claiming they need to stay in touch with their children in case of another crisis like September 11. One of the council members was also quoted saying “Kids pass notes back and forth but that doesn’t mean we take away pens.”To date, teenagers have proved to be very creative in their attempt to work their way around the cell phone bans in their schools. One popular example includes hiding the phones in a sandwich roll (yummy) or leaving phones at nearby stores which charge small holding fees."

http://www.sub.uni-goettingen.com

Parents Sued The Department of Education in 2006

On July 17, 2006 a group of New York City parents sued the Department of Education over a law that bans students from carrying cell phones in schools. The suit argues that the ban is too broad and violates the parents' "due process to personal liberty" because it "interferes with the relationship between parents and their children, without a compelling education reason for doing so." No idea what that means. Parents want their kids to carry cell phones for safety reasons, mostly when traveling to and from school. School officials say cell phones in school are disruptive. Parents are now resorting to sneaking the cell phones in kids' backpacks. Parents are really concerned because of this matter, they are worried for the safety of their child.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Angry Students Because of Cell Phone Ban


On April 26, New York City police officers set up mobile security scanners at the Acorn High School for Social Justice in Brooklyn. They took away 129 cell phones, 10 CD players, two iPods, a box cutter and a knife. The searches and the ban on cell phones have prompted protests by high school students across the city.

Cell phones have long been banned in the city's public schools, but principals at schools without metal detectors, such as ACORN High School, often ignored the policy, and students got away with carrying cell phones, as long as the phones did not make noise in class.
Now all students have to obey the rules because of a new Department of Education security policy. City police officers have started randomly showing up at schools that don't have metal detectors and using mobile scanners to keep weapons out of the schools, according to a department press release. But the police are also confiscating cell phones, iPods and other banned electronic devices. If cell phones are seized during a scan at school, school officials decide when to return the phones.