- — The Valdosta Daily Times was ready to take the Valdosta City School System to task for its plans to ban cell phones from the middle and high school levels.
After all, cell phones have become a part of daily life throughout society. Adults regularly juggle business and personal matters on their cell phones either through spoken conversations or texting.
Cell phones have made many people masters of multi-tasking. They can take a business meeting and text a client simultaneously. They can get an e-mail from the office while at the store.
If a cell phone rings in the middle of a meeting, few bosses take away the employee’s cell phone. Often the caller is a client, and the interruption is the price of doing business in the immediacy of the 21st century.
Banishing cell phones from schools, and perhaps even the classroom, seems to do little to prepare students for the world they will enter: A tech-savvy world, which students often better understand than the adults teaching them.
Perhaps, schools should look for ways to incorporate cell phones into class curriculum. Perhaps, schools could utilize texts, etc., to better inform students in a forum which they have already mastered and will likely need in their future careers.
Too often, the older generations say, We didn’t have cell phones when we went to school and we did just fine. That thinking is outdated. That thinking represents the world as it was, not as it is.
The Times still believes these points have merits. Yet, after hearing Valdosta School Superintendent Dr. Bill Cason’s reasons for proposing a ban, we have modified our stance.
Cason paints a picture of schools where cell phones run amok amongst the student bodies: Texting locations for fights, distributing pornographic materials, photographing and e-mailing tests to other students, the constant interruptions, the daily report of a stolen cell phone, etc.
Hearing these horror stories, it’s no wonder schools seek to ban cell phones.
Still, there must be some middle ground between a total ban and chaos.
Likely, Valdosta schools and this newspaper’s Rant & Rave line will be inundated with both complaints and praise for Cason’s proposal.
However, what we need are ideas on how to reconcile this matter. We need people to share real solutions.
Will anyone make that call?
What We Think
What We Think — Cell phones: Tough call
- What We Think
-
-
Books: A part of summer adventures
Summer should be a time for swimming, playing, camping, trips, pursuing interests and fun for youngsters taking a break from the school year. It should be a time to recharge their batteries.
-
Memorial Day: A solemn occasion
Memorial Day has taken on many meanings through the years. The unofficial start of summer, a day off from work, a day to honor family and friends who have passed away.
-
Elections: Creating a two-party region?
Twenty years ago, most area elections were decided during the primaries. Then, almost every candidate qualified as a Democrat. While there may be plenty of challengers on the ballot, many seats were decided in July or a few weeks later during the primary run-off.
-
Thumbs up, thumbs down
THUMBS UP: To South Georgians making fine impressions on television singing competitions. Phillip Phillips of Leesburg won “American Idol” this week. Meanwhile, Lowndes High School graduate Stacia Watkins participated in the new ABC show “Duets.” Well done!
-
Farewell to the vanishing ace
Donald S. “Bush” Bryan was not only a rare individual. He was part of a vanishing breed.
An Adel resident for the past 30 years, Bryan was a World War II flying ace. Not just an ace but a double ace. A pilot must down five enemy aircraft to become an ace; Bryan downed 13.3 enemy planes in Europe. The fractions represent planes downed with other pilots. -
A widespread mosquito alert
In announcing the discovery of a mosquito carrying the West Nile Virus strain, city and health officials did not include the specific location of the discovery.
-
Of Guantanamo Bay and a Founding Father
Some readers may wonder how a Valdosta High School graduate could bring himself as an attorney to represent a Guantanamo Bay prisoner charged in connection to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
-
Congratulations, VSU Softball!
This weekend, Valdosta State University Blazers Softball became the latest team to add to Valdosta’s TitleTown legacy.
-
School’s out so watch out!
Summer is a time of rest, vacations and trips. It is a time when school is out, when people take time off from work, when people may stay out a little later. It is a time of swimming, trying new things, and seeking adventure.
-
Qualifiers are next leaders
While the national media focuses attention on the presidential election, it should be remembered that we will also choose our local leaders this year.
- More What We Think Headlines
-
Books: A part of summer adventures


