yes bc it can help improve there learning skills. they need to know they can have it or if they cant they will want to have it out, and that just gets them in trouble. so yes it is good.
I-pods are bad to use in class especially while a teacher is speaking. It may seem that the students aren't talking to one and other as much and are paying attention but most likely they are paying attention to their music more than the teachers words. Knowing most kids they wont be listening to anything soothing most likely rap or hip hop which draws your mind away from things with the rapper speaking fast and the inappropriate language used. I think I-pods should be aloud during lunch and study hall periods but not during class for the students sake.
Students should be able to use calculators in math class because it is needed to know how to use a calculator.
Students should use respectful and formal language when speaking to teachers in class.
in Miss Jonsons class all her students are hungry students
He was out-standing in his class
It is about 12 o'clock. There are about 20 students in the class.
You can use ground cardamom as a substitute for cardamom pods in your recipe. Use half the amount of ground cardamom as the recipe calls for in cardamom pods.
The standard collective noun for the noun 'class' is 'a class of students'.Example: A class of students painted the mural in the school lobby.The noun 'class' is a general collective noun for groups of people or things.Example: We cater to a very selective class of clients.
A class about network security auditing would teach students to be resourceful in solving network security problems. A network security auditing class would also teach students how to use the newest plug-ins.
The keywords struct and class are both used for the same purpose: to define a class. The only difference is that members of a struct are public by default while the members of a class are private by default. As such, the following classes are identical: struct A { int data; }; class B { public: int data; }; By convention we use structures to define a "plain-old data" type (POD). A POD is basically the same as a struct in C, it has no user-defined constructors, methods or operator overloads and makes use of trivial default construction with member-wise copy. PODs may use inheritance provides all base classes are themselves PODs. In C++, we use classes to define non-POD structures. In C there are no classes and all structures are PODs.
If your asking why shouldn't studentsbring cellular phones to school it's because students want to use their phone during class and that interrupts the class.
'Their' would be the appropriate pronoun to use in this sentence:All students must bring their homework to class.