こちらの掲示板は、「TCGフェスティバル2020」に参加する予定のユーザー様同士のコミュニケーションの場としてご活用ください。
大会開催・イベント開催についての投稿は自由ですが、あくまで非公認のイベントとなりますので予めご了承ください。
※公序良俗に反する内容は禁止です。
※内容によっては主催者判断で投稿を削除させていただきますので予めご了承ください。

This topic contains 0件の返信, has 1人の参加者, and was last updated by  FrancisKiple 3 hours、 33 minutes前.

  • 投稿者
    投稿
  • #117665 返信

    FrancisKiple

    What this high school senior wants adults to know about classroom phone bans
    [url=https://sberlegal.ru]консультация юриста сбербанка
    юрист онлайн
    консультация по ипотеке сбербанк
    как получить консультацию по ипотеке в сбербанке
    сбер бизнес помощь
    сбербанк онлайн юридические
    юристы онлайн
    бизнес медиация это
    сбер юр лицам
    обновить иск в сбербанк онлайн
    [/url]
    When my friends and I walked into homeroom on the first day of school this year, my teacher told all of us to put our phones in a black plastic box on an old desk by the classroom door.

    Handing over our phones during class is an official school policy, and my teachers always make this announcement at the beginning of the school year. But teachers would usually forget about the box by third period on the first day, never to be mentioned again by the second day of school. This year, however, the policy stuck that entire first day — and every day since.
    I asked my Latin teacher why the school was suddenly getting so strict on phones. It turns out that over the summer most of the teachers had read social psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s book “The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness.”

    Haidt, the Thomas Cooley Professor of Ehtical Leadership at New York University Stern School of Business, argues that a phone-based childhood leads to mentally unhealthy kids who are unprepared for life and, in my Latin teacher’s words, it “really freaked us out.” Teachers were serious about taking our phones now.

    It’s not just causing trouble at my school. Some 72% of public high school teachers in the United States say that cell phone distraction among their students is a major problem, according to a study published by the Pew Research Center in April. In high schools that already have cell phone policies, 60% of teachers say that the policies are very or somewhat difficult to enforce, the same study reported.

    Several states have passed laws attempting to restrict cell phone use in schools, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed legislation requiring school districts to regulate cell phone use. At least seven of the 20 largest school districts in the nation have either banned phones during the school day or plan to do so.

返信先: медиатор в бизнесе
あなたの情報: