No cell phones in school?
Cell phones get a bad rap in most parts of America. Self-help gurus promise serenity if we turn off our Blackberries, planes ban their use, and public conversation is largely frowned upon in crowded places. This is a marked difference from most parts of the developing world. Why? In America, mobile devices have come to epitomize convenience but are underutilized for valuable information sharing. In the developing world mobiles are obviously still used for conversation and staying in touch, but they also provide an outlet for cheap and long-distance transfer of information that was previously impossible. However, despite their ubiquity, some people are still ignorant of their usefulness.

The use of mobile phones has been used for all types of initiatives that typically fall under the umbrella of development work. Text messages have been used to monitor elections and share market prices for milk. As long as mobiles continue to improve daily life, their importance will grow. If monitored correctly, governments can harness this trend to garner another source of foreign and domestic direct investment to gain desperately needed capital. Doubly productive, the explosion of mobile technology also acts as a "leap frog" technology preventing governments from needing to expend huge sums for the development of traditional infrastructure needed for analog phones and land lines.
Despite all their benefits I would argue that cell phones are still underused in the developing world. In areas where education of youth is prevented either by conflict, distance or terrain, or simply a lack of time due to hours spent working, mobile technology can help provide educational materials and resources that may traditionally be unavailable.
It may sound a little unusual, but radio technology was used throughout Australia in the 1950s and 1960s to educate children where Outback distances prevented collective schooling. If countries are really going to ensure universal primary education by 2015, then governments may be better off distributing cell phones than laptops. Especially with the rapidly growing number of people who use mobiles to access the internet, the new marketplace for ideas.















Comments
Students should not have cellphones during school time...
Students should not have cellphones during school time...
For these reasons
-Cheating by text message
-Taking pictures in the restrooms, and lockers
-Kidnapped
-distractions
-classroom calls
-bad behavior
-terrorist attacks
-School shooting
-Sending answers
-Setting fights
-Plotting a bomb threat
- Arranging drug deal
mobiles : complete NO NO for immatures
I agree with Morakiniyo...cell phones should not be allowed in schools...
I have points both in favour and against but latter are much intense than the former...its true that today the world has become so unpredictable that we cant say wats gonna happen the next second...in such an unsafe environment mobiles are a good way of keeping track of well being of children and there whereabouts but we hav not yet matured enough to handel them...we need social, mental, moral advancement along with technological environment to maintain an equillibrium...which is the need of the hour....
our students are not yet matured enough to handel such gadgets..it draws there attention away from studies, brings disparities gap of rich and poor..I hav many other reasons to quote but that wont be feasable here..... for me its a strict no...
Mobile phones are not for everyone!
Kids should not be allowed to use own cellphones until they have demonstrated adequate sense of responsibility and shown good impreesions of peer pressure management. Even in a University like Covenant(see: http://www.covenantuniversity.com), both graduates and undergraduates are reportedly not allowed to use phones.
Sense of responsibility...
Indeed it is not for everyone... As you correctly said there should be adequate sense of responsibility for the users. Not only kids but grown ups also. There are numerous cases where in mobile phones are used for organised petty crimes, forget about the bigger multi-million scams; eg:mugging in a lonely locality; day light robbery in houses, shops etc...
Crime was never been so easily executed!!! On the contrary, crime/criminals were never so easily busted too!!!
mobiles and development
this really rings true (no pun intended) - mobiles are now making a pretty big impact on development. I went to a talk about this recently and was amazed to hear things like:
- Of the 4 billion mobile users in the world today, most are in developing countries
- More than 10 million people in countries such as Pakistan and Bangladesh use their cell phones to consult doctors, rather than traveling far to poor quality clinics, and missing work in the process.
Projects like M-PESA have also taken off in a big way.
A good resource on all of this is MobileActive.org
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