“Greet your child with a smile, not a mobile.”
That’s the sign parents at St Joseph’s school in North Yorkshire see when they arrive to pick up their kids.
Just in case that’s not clear enough, there’s a picture of an adult holding a phone with a big red line drawn through it. GET. OFF. YOUR. PHONE.
The response from parents at the school has been mixed.
“I don’t think it’s their business, is it?” said one dad when he was interviewed by a reporter from ITV News.
But on Facebook, other parents have leapt to the defence of the school.
“My child attends this school and I totally agree with the signs, 100 per cent,” posted a mum. “They have been away from you for six hours. I personally want to know what sort of day they have had.”
Top Comments
Oh ffs - I was a latch key kid from when I was very young. Both parents working - I prepped my own lunches, got myself to school and back with my big sister (who was a young child herself) . I run a small business from home so this doesn't happen to my child. I prep his lunches, take him to school every morning, dress him, feed him, help him with anything he needs. Sometimes I need to take a business call during school pickup time, sometimes I don't. Either way soon enough it's dinner and bath time, and time for bedtime stories. No phones at all then - could it be possible that the pickup time interaction isn't the only time parents spend with their kids?!?! I certainly don't deserve to be judged.
How about giving parents a list of good conversation starter questions to ask their kids after school? How about setting fun adult/kid projects for homework, instead of handing out worksheets?
I guarantee that if they'd done this, there'd be articles complaining about that too. "How dare the school presume to think I don't know how to talk to my own child?!" "I don't have time to do projects with my children!"
I would not describe the sign as hostile but even if it was, it's just a sign. Keep talking on your phone, if you object so much.
Or parents could just, you know, parent their kids without expecting the school to give them a list that tells them how?