School bell

School bell visible in St Johns School, Sydney, Australia (1872)
A school boy rings a traditional school bell

The ringing of a school bell is a signal that tells a school's students when it is time to go to class in the morning and when it is time to change classes during the day as well as when students are dismissed from school. Typically the first bell tells the students that it is time to report to class and the bell that occurs shortly after that means that the students are late. There may also be a warning bell between the first bell and the late bell.

In some schools it may take the form of a physical bell, usually electrically operated. In other schools it may be a tone, siren, electronic bell sound, a series of chimes, or music played over an intercom. Most schools where people who require sign language more than hearing go to use hand signals.

Failure

In some schools, students have been seen interfering school bell systems. While they do not actually hack into the school bell system, they often use a synthesizer application, commonly on a smartphone or tablet, combined with a loudspeaker, to reproduce a sound nearly identical to the real school bell. Students often use this in open areas during lunch as a practical joke to clear large areas of students, or near the end of classtime, to be dismissed earlier. Early attempts at such interference were often seen as outright hacking of school systems, and were thus punished severely.

Criticism

In October 2010 Mackie Academy, in Stonehaven, Kincardineshire took the move to turn off their school bell system, following criticism that the school bells agitated pupils. According to the headteacher the corridors became much quieter after the system was introduced. It was hoped that pupils would take more responsibility for ensuring they arrived on time to lessons.[1] A number of other schools in the United Kingdom have made similar decisions and either partially or completely turned off the school bell system.

Banning of school bells in Somalia

In April 2010, Al-Shabab–an Islamic militant group that controls large parts of Somalia–ordered school bells banned as they sounded too similar to church bells. Hand claps were then used as an alternative way of signaling that a class was beginning or ending.[2]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to School bells.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.