As I reflect on my
teaching career here at Yavapai over the past ten (eesh, really?!) years, there are a number of factors that stand out. First,
how much our students have changed, not only in the skill sets that they bring
to the table, but also in their ways-of-being
(i.e., their expectations, attitudes and behaviors).
Now that last one is a tricky area for many college educators, but
here at the community college, we were established, uh, to serve the community… Thus, it would seem there is an implied mandate that
we actually do that ;-)
To me, that means tuning in to our students, to not get so
locked into “this is the way I/we do things” that we cannot adapt
and change to the new realities that face us in the classroom each
semester, every year.
Throughout this 9x9x25
blog challenge, I’ll be focusing on my
process of turning in to these shifts and changes over the last ten years.|
And I’d like to start by
focusing on one particular new “way-of-being” among students…
Texting in the classroom.
C’mon my faculty
comrades, you’ve been there -- smack dab in the middle of a witty, spirited and
entertaining lecture, only to witness one of your students suddenly be moved to
pull out her cell phone and start texting? Happened to me last
week, as a matter of fact. (It was an Honors Student texting no less.)
I have learned from
experience not to call her out by name in the middle of the class and say “Honors Student, put your cell phone away." (That's a story...)
Nor is it my style to
march up and snatch it away -- let alone, destroy it, like this guy.
Instead, I wrote a Note
to Self on the roster: “Cell Phone Policy,”
reminding me to make a general announcement about our cell phone policy.. Which
I did, yesterday… I even wrote it with a black Sharpie at the bottom of the
sign-up roster, for my students to see as well.
It's interesting... cell
phones are almost an appendage for our students these days. Ten years ago, students would silence their phones and manage to put them
away for the hour and 15 minutes we were in class.
But now the urge to check one's phone seems an
irresistible temptation. Frankly, that is one of the reasons I began
recording my lectures. I'd tell"offending" students, “If you’ve got a lot
going on and it’s difficult to focus, take the class online and watch the
lecture at home.” That way I could ensure that I had everyone else's rapt and undivided attention once
they were in class… (Uh…yeah, right ;-)
When I prepared my
Syllabi this semester and read what I had composed for a cell phone policy, a
few of my friends chuckled. Distracting
other students by playing with your “stuff” (phone, laptop, etc.) during class officially
meets the criteria for disruptive behavior. Some
suggested I change “stuff” to “junk.” I could not bring myself to do that, “stuff”
was teetering on the edge to me. But the policy doesn’t seem to be enough…
For the moment, I’m at
an impasse, not quite sure what more to add to my policy. Yet I trust that it will work
itself out, I'll think of something… And that maybe in time, if enough students take
my interpersonal communication class, they’ll realize that texting when another
person is talking is not only rude, but uh,"clueless.".
And if they refrain from "cognitively wandering" in PSY 101, they’ll learn that no
one can really multi-task and give each task one's highest and best effort...
So you! Stop playing with your... Put your phone away. Yes you!
You know, I have struggled with this -
ReplyDelete- Burn them at the stake (not really!)
- Grab that phone
- I'm not your Mom
- You're in college so grow up
- Stand quietly by them while they are texting
-
- Ok- it's annoying, I'm taking it away-
- OK [rest of] class, what do you think?
- It's your learning, so at least go out of the classroom (sorry if you missed something; perhaps you could leave the phone off!)