K
Kevin
Guest
If you get caught with your cellphone more then one time, you loose it for the semester. Even more so, the principal can force you to turnover your password and search through your messages and compile a list of students that you texted during class hours.
With my blackberry receiving both text messages, having direct access to my email accounts, messenger and facebook. Under what circumstances can a principal do this? If am offline on my macbook my phone automatically kicks in it's messenger service and my contacts show up. I do not delete my messages on my blackberry until the memory is full (currently there are more than five thousand messages stored on my phone).
If you refuse to handover your battery or the password to the phone you will receive an immediate suspension.
I want to be clear here: I am not an irresponsible student; I don't use my phone often, if at all during class hours. I agree that rules are rules, and if you break them you deserve the consciences however I also believe that principals under estimate a students ability to question their behavior. And I truly believe that though a principal is in a difficult situation – they have to be reasonable.
So: is this “legal” (Ontario, Canada) if it is legal, could it be easily debated upon within the legal system? Don’t worry I’m not planning on bringing on a lawsuit against my school, just an interested individual.
Could I report my phone as stolen? To prevent unauthorized access to my account and phone services?
With my blackberry receiving both text messages, having direct access to my email accounts, messenger and facebook. Under what circumstances can a principal do this? If am offline on my macbook my phone automatically kicks in it's messenger service and my contacts show up. I do not delete my messages on my blackberry until the memory is full (currently there are more than five thousand messages stored on my phone).
If you refuse to handover your battery or the password to the phone you will receive an immediate suspension.
I want to be clear here: I am not an irresponsible student; I don't use my phone often, if at all during class hours. I agree that rules are rules, and if you break them you deserve the consciences however I also believe that principals under estimate a students ability to question their behavior. And I truly believe that though a principal is in a difficult situation – they have to be reasonable.
So: is this “legal” (Ontario, Canada) if it is legal, could it be easily debated upon within the legal system? Don’t worry I’m not planning on bringing on a lawsuit against my school, just an interested individual.
Could I report my phone as stolen? To prevent unauthorized access to my account and phone services?