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Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone

Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

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Page 1: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Managing Your

Relationship With Your

Cellphone

Page 2: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Learning Targets

1. I will examine how I use my cell phone.

2. I will identify skills to help others and myself

manage cell phone use.

3. I will learn about nomophobia.

4. I will consider the impact of my cell phone

use on myself and others.

5. I will evaluate the impact of cell phones on

my academics.

Page 3: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Raise your hand if you . . . .

1. . . have a cell phone?

2. . . have a smartphone?

3. . . use your phone to send text messages or check email.

4. . . use your phone to check Twitter?

5. . . use your phone to check Facebook?

6. . . use your phone to check Snapchat?

7. . . use your phone as an alarm clock?

8. . . check your phone for messages while you are sleeping

Page 4: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

How often do you do the following?

1. Use my phone to make a phone call.

2. Check my phone for messages?

3. Send or receive a text message?

4. Send or receive an email?

5. Go to a social networking site?

Several times an hour

Once an hour

Several times a day

Once a day

Several times a week

Page 6: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Let’s talk!1. The video is named, “I forgot my phone.”

a. Is this an appropriate title? Explain.

1. Artists often use hyperbole - or exaggeration - to

make their point.

a. What point or message is the director making?

1. Some students said it is NOT exaggerated but

realistically shows how people use cell phones.

a. What do you think?

Page 7: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Let’s talk!

1. Pick ONE memorable scene from the video.

a. As a group decide how the main character

SHOULD have called her friends out on

their behavior.

b. What techniques do you and your friends

use to prevent these types of situations?

Identify ONE way and be prepared to share

with the group.

Page 8: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Let’s talk!

1. The director - who is also the main

character - seems to be arguing that our

use of cellphone are making us LESS

connected with people around us.

a. What do you think? Do our cellphones

make us MORE connected or LESS

connected?

Page 10: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Do you have Nomophobia?

1. Have you ever gone somewhere and needed to go back

home because you realized you forgot your cell phone?

2. Can you touch your phone just by reaching out your

hand right now?

3. Do you leave your phone turned on at night? (Putting it

on silent doesn’t count…)

4. Is your smartphone the first thing you check after

waking up in the morning?

Page 11: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Do you have Nomophobia?

5. Do you get your phone out in the bathroom?

6. Do you send more than 20 text messages a day?Does

your heart skip a “happy beat” every time you get a new

message or notification?

7. When you have an unread message or any other

notification on your phone but could not check it

somehow, you are not able to concentrate on your

work?

8. Do you imagine that your phone is ringing in your

pocket, but when you check, it is not?

Page 12: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

There’s

an APP

for that!

Tracks your

cell phone

use and

habits.

And, it is

FREE!

Page 13: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Some Research

More than 90% of Americans ages 18 to 29

sleep with a cellphone on or next to their bed.

People who text are 42% more likely to sleep

with their phones than those who don't text.(A 2010 Pew Research Center study of more than 2,000 adults.)

Page 14: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Some Research

Female college students spend an average of

10 hours a day on their cell phones.

Male students report spending nearly eight.

60 percent of study participants think they may

be addicted to their cell phones.o (Journal of Behavioral Addictions. 2014)

Page 15: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Some Research

Using Facebook, Twitter and texting while

studying are negatively associated with GPA.

The more you are distracted by social media,

the lower your GPA.

Emailing while studying was positively

associated.(A Decade of Distraction? How Multitasking Affects Student Outcomes, 2011)

Page 16: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Look Up or Can We

Autocorrect Humanity?

CHALLENGE STUDENT CHOICE

Page 17: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Can we autocorrect humanity? (3:57)

Page 19: Managing Your Relationship With Your Cellphone: A Primer for High School Students

Conclusions

1. What is your relationship with technology and your cell

phone? Is it healthy or unhealthy?

2. What do we think about how we use cell phones?

3. Do cell phones help our relationships or hurt them?

4. If cell phones maybe hurting our relationships with

people, how are cell phones hurting our relationship

with learning?

5. How do cell phones impact our effectiveness as

students?