Central Berkshire Considers Updating Cell Phone Policy

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Central Berkshire Regional School District began its discussion on revising its cell phone policy to make it more stringent during its School Committee meeting last week. 
 
The goal of the policy change is to help students be more engaged in school and to prevent students from taking videos of their peers without permission and spreading them around.  
 
Superintendent Leslie Blake-Davis presented the discussion to the committee by inquiring whether the best path would be to prohibit cell phone use all day or to allow use during students' lunch period. 
 
Many districts in the surrounding areas have started this discussion because of the possible grant opportunities that would come from it in the future, Assistant Superintendent Michael Henault said. 
 
Like other surrounding school districts, Central Berkshire is considering utilizing Yondr pouches for students to secure their phone and smartwatches. 
 
Chicopee schools and McCann Technical School in North Adams have enacted the use of Yondr magnetic lock pouches and have data that Central Berkshire can learn from when revising its cell phone policy. The Pittsfield Public Schools have also mulled the idea of the locked pouches and will be discussing changes in its cell-phone policy on Wednesday. 
 
When implementing a more stringent cell-phone policy like requiring students to place their phones in their locker, districts have run into the issue on how to manage it, Henault said. 
 
One pushback that many parents have when it comes to stricter phone policies is not being able to reach their children in an emergency, he said. 
 
The district would have information sessions for parents and students to help ease any concerns they have about implementing Yondr pouches, he said. 
 
"These parents of the kids are addicted to the phones and they're from the generation that they're the ones who first had the phone so they can't picture not having their phone so they can't picture it for their kids. They need to see this," one School Committee member said. 
 
A representative from Yondr will attend the next committee meeting to answer any questions. 
 
The districts are adapting to a cultural shift that is happening, said school officials said. "We can't maybe necessarily stop the cultural shift but I think we should focus on the impact to learning," said one committee member. 
 
Other members said it is important to look into how it will affect academic and social emotional learning prior to making any changes. Those issues could be mental health concerns like anxiety if cell phones are banned all day or students being distracted worrying about what they're missing online. 
 
School Committee member Art Alpert said based on conversations he's had with his son, a teacher, it seems cell phones have turned students into "zombies."

Tags: CBRSD,   phone,   

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Freedom Fund Awards Speakers Highlight Importance of Unity

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Keith Beauchamp, producer of two documentaries on Emmet Till, speaks at the Berkshire NAACP Freedom Fund Awards at Berkshire Hills Country Club. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It's not a coincidence that unity is at the end of the word community. This was especially made evident at the Berkshire NAACP Freedom Fund Awards on Saturday. 
 
More than 200 people turned out at the Berkshire Hills Country Club for the presentation of awards and to hear speakers, many of whom showcased the importance of unification and continuing the fight to maintain the freedom and opportunities their predecessors strived to obtain. 
 
"Tonight, I want to speak candidly about a deeply troubling trend that threatens the freedom and opportunities we have fought so hard to achieve — the freedom many in this room have sacrificed for, protested for, and worked tirelessly to protect," Berkshire County Branch NAACP President Dennis Powell said in his opening remarks. 
 
Powell highlighted the recent work that has been done and continues to be done in dismantling programs designed to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion. 
 
On Jan. 20, President Donald Trump signed an Executive Order, "Ending Radical And Wasteful Government [Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion] Programs And Preferencing." 
 
The order criticizes the policy implemented by the Biden administration, describing it as wasteful and discriminatory. 
 
Powell demonstrated how some of the corporations that community members frequently visit, including Target, Walmart, Meta, and McDonalds, have scaled back or dismantled their DEI initiatives meant to foster equity and inclusion in their workplace. 
 
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