Cell Phone Use in Classrooms
Op3.07 Cell Phone Usage in Classrooms
(Revised Spring 2009)
As a member of the learning community, each student has a responsibility to other
students who are members of the community. When cell phones or pagers ring and students
respond in class or leave class to respond, it disrupts the class. Therefore, the
Office of the Provost prohibits the use by students of cell phones, pagers, PDAs,
or similar communication devices during scheduled classes. All such devices must
be turned off or put in a silent (vibrate) mode and ordinarily should not be taken
out during class. Given the fact that these same communication devices are an integral
part of the University’s emergency notification system, an exception to this policy
would occur when numerous devices activate simultaneously. When this occurs, students
may consult their devices to determine if a university emergency exists. If that
is not the case, the devices should be immediately returned to silent mode and put
away. Other exceptions to this policy may be granted at the discretion of the instructor.
Sanctions for violation of this policy are determined by the instructor and may include
dismissal from the class—see Class Disruption.
Use of cell phones, similar communication devices, or any unauthorized electronic
data storage devise in testing situations, other than to receive University emergency
notifications, may constitute a violation of the Academic Integrity Policy and lead
to sanctions under the Student Academic Integrity Policies and Procedures.
There are two appeal processes available to students. A sanction for class disruption
may be appealed using the appeal process stated in the Class Disruption policy; however,
a violation that involves a charge of academic dishonesty must be appealed using the
process described in the Student Academic Integrity Policies and Procedures.