Not in elementary school, no. Some of my highschool teachers had phones on their desks or in their offices depending on what they did.
They weren't landlines, though. They were connected to an internal phone network.
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Not in elementary school, no. Some of my highschool teachers had phones on their desks or in their offices depending on what they did.
They weren't landlines, though. They were connected to an internal phone network.
How else are teachers supposed to contact the office?
By going there? None of my schools had any communication line between classroom and anywhere else, except for networking in the computer rooms
A couple classrooms I was in had an intercom buzzer that either had it's own speaker or worked with the rooms loudspeaker!
The teachers I had opened the window and shouted at the office
Kinda? You had to press a code to dial out, otherwise they were only good for calling the office or other classrooms.
Both the schools I went to and the schools I have taught at had landlines in the classroom, as well as some in the lounge and the main offices. They were all real big on parent teacher communication so that might have been a reason why.
No, they just used to send one of the kids to the office, or there was a student on 'office duty' for the office to contact the classrooms.
A bit like carrier pigeon, but the school didn't have to pay for bird food
I think generally our teachers sent a child as a carrier pigeon
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I donβt remember any of that. When my teachers would have to speak with the office (which was rare), they would go there.
It wasnβt a land line but connected to the school switchboard. You had to go through the office to get an outside line because students would use them if not.
Every single classroom I was ever in had a corded phone in case they needed to contact the front office or in case of an emergency. The only exception would be gym class, or orchestra class, where the phones would probably just be in the teacher's office ( classroom? ).
This wasn't the 90s or 2000s, but later. I personally think it's a pretty good idea. Even if everyone has a phone, having a backup in the classrooms just in case is useful since, unless the power goes out, you don't have to worry about not being able.to call the outside world if your personal phone is dead.
Front office definitely had their own corded phones as well. I presume it's the same for middle school as it was for highschool, but student office had a phone that the students could use in case they needed at my highschool as well.
Edit: the phones were normally on their desks, so messing with them wasn't an option. We did have a PA system at every school I attended, but I don't ever recall there being a way to respond outside of calling the front office.
When I was a kid my primary school did but my secondary schools didn't, though they did have offices with phones in scattered throughout the campus so a phone was never far away.
That said, up until a couple years ago I worked in schools IT and whoever we were doing a network refit schools would always spec a couple of points in each classroom for a VOIP handset. Most could only make internal calls though.
Only in the teachers lounge.
So, if somehting happened in the classroom, teacher was alone... all alone. Long run to the main offices.
Then again, there were no cell phones or internet, so nothing ever happened and if it did they were able to keep it local.
Teachers were also different. You did not fuck with the teacher or he/she kicked your ass. This however changed during my elementary school days.
No, but each classroom had a PA System for announcements and whatnot. It was a two-way system, the teacher could use it to page the office if needed.
This was in Ontario during the 90's.
No there was usually a two-way PA system that the teacher could call the school office with (an assistant principal would usually answer), but I don't remember ever seeing an actual phone in a classroom.
No, people would just walk over
Yes, in classrooms and they should still.
Best we had was a buzzer that the teacher could use to communicate with the office. It's kinda ridiculous looking back at it now. You'd think they would have had a phone system in place.
yeah I have seen the buzzer thing.
No, but out of the unusual we had TV and Radio coax connectors in every classroom.
Painted over and unusable, of course.
Likewise, but with the CRT set still present in most of the classrooms. There would be an attempt to make use of them every once in a while with "video announcements" and school news, but it never stuck. Some of them had integrated VCRs and it was always funny watching the teacher climb or jump up to insert the tape.
They installed big flat screens in the cafetorium some time after I graduated, but I think it would have been much cooler to just bring out all the disused CRTs instead and make it look like one of those old production control rooms
Yes. A common prank I did for some of my... Looser-gripped teachers was turning the phone on the hook upside down.
At my university, professors had phone lines, but only in their offices. In my lower education, there was a main office with administrative assistants that would handle messages for the teachers.
We did have the classic intercom system, and the main office could page a teacher if something urgent was going on.
I was in school in the late 90's through the Bush years, two different public school systems in the Atlanta metro. All classrooms had a landline phone, the office would call in sometimes or we could call them. There was also a two way intercom and the office would spy on you or just become a voice in the sky
yeah but this was the late 90s through 00s
I went to a brand new middle school for one year, I was in the first 8th grade class to attend that school, it had a schmancy new VoIP system with a telephone mounted just inside the door of each room, and each could get a line to dial out.
Every other K-12 school I went to had an older PA system, each room had a slanted front speaker box that could be used for one-way communication from the office to the entire building, or could be used two-way to a classroom. The classroom couldn't call out, but the office could call in. There were phones in office spaces dotted around the campus typically.
I also only remember one teacher prior to the 9th grade that owned a cell phone.
Yes, we kept messing with it because we would flip the dip switch on the phone from tone to pulse and you can't use a pulse based phone on a tone based PBX.
We did. I only saw it get used once or twice a year, usually to take a call from the front office or the school nurse. There was some internal numbering scheme and a certain prefix for calls to outside numbers.
The announcements also went through the same kind of phone used in the classrooms. Source: was appointed as the announcer for a year.
Addendum: If it wasn't a private matter, the front office just paged the intercom speaker of the recipient classroom. The teacher would yell back into the speaker and it was a good day if one of us students were allowed to reply instead.
None of my schools had phones in the classrooms. We had intercom systems that the teacher could use. A speaker on the wall with a button to press to call the front office and another to press when speaking. The only phones I knew of were in the front office and in the teachers lounges.
I have one in my room currently.
yES.