The Coweta County Board of Education voted
at their regular meeting on September 11 to change the School
System’s policy regarding student possession of cell phones and
similar electronic communication devices.
Prior to the board’s vote, student possession of a cell phone on
school campuses was strictly prohibited. Effective September 12,
students are permitted to have cell phones, though student use
of cell phones and other electronic communication devices is
strictly prohibited during the instructional school day.
The school board’s policy requires principals to apply very
strict consequences to any students who use cell phones during
school hours.
The School Board’s new policy is:
- Students may possess cell phones,
pocket pagers, or similar electronic devices.
- Students observed using cell
phones, pocket pagers, or electronic communication devices
during the instructional day, except for health or unusual
reasons approved by the Board of Education, will face
serious consequences and will forfeit their ability to have
such devices:
- Upon any infraction of the
policy, cell phones will be confiscated immediately.
Phones confiscated will only be released to parents.
- On the first infraction the
phone will be confiscated and the student will be
warned.
- On the second infraction the
student will be given three days of in-school
suspension.
- On the third infraction the
student will be referred to Student Support Services for
further disciplinary action.
- The instructional day is defined
as the time period between a student’s arrival on campus and
the final dismissal bell for all students. The instructional
day includes lunch periods and class changes. School buses
are extensions of the instructional day, and use of the
devices mentioned above is prohibited while students are on
buses. The final bell or dismissal time will vary from
school to school, and each principal will define the
dismissal time at their school.
- The use of cell phones includes
making phone calls, receiving phone calls, ringing or other
sounds, playing music or video, text messaging, use of cell
phone cameras, or any other electronic function.
School principals began informing
parents of the new policy this week by letter. In the letter,
parents were advised that the best way for students to avoid
infractions of the new policy was to keep cell phones and other
electronic devices turned off at all times during the school
day.
School System administrator Steve Barker told the board that the
old policy was extremely difficult to enforce, but that
prohibiting use of cell phones was important to maintain
academic integrity in classes and to maintain orderly schools.
Board member Brian Roy said that many parents had asked for the
board to reconsider the old policy, because they wanted their
children to keep cell phones for emergency purposes after
school. “I think this is the best compromise,” he said.
Board members made the policy change effective immediately, by
amending the school system’s Student Code of Conduct policy.
Board members asked Superintendent Blake Bass and schools to
inform parents and students of the policy and “acclimate”
students to the new rules in the coming weeks.
Superintendent Bass said that he would encourage principals and
teachers to remind students to “turn off their cell phones” at
the start of the first class and during morning announcements,
to help students avoid breaking the rules. |