No mobile phones please!
By Cinderella Jie
Mobile phones are very popular nowadays.
Everyone seems to have one. But they can be quite annoying in public places
like classrooms and libraries.
People enjoy the convenience and
feeling of "being in fashion" a handset provides. Joyce Lee, a pre-university
student, said, "I need a mobile phone since it is easy for my friends to
contact me."
Connie Fok, a second-year student
of the Faculty of Business Administration (FBA), said that it would seem
to be "out of date" if you do not have a handset.
But this high-tech product sometimes
causes annoyance to other people. For example, your mobile phone rings
suddenly during a class or meeting.
Anne Bauer Godsey, a lecturer of
Communications Technology, said that she would be very upset when a student's
mobile phone rings in her class.
"I think it is a kind of noisy and
disturbing when a handset rings suddenly in class. It seems that students
do not respect the teacher," a teaching assistant in Japanese studies,
commented.
Angel Chan, a third-year student
of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (FSH), said, "I think
it will disturb other students who are concentrated on the lecture."
Veronica Chan, a third-year student
of Faculty of Education, agreed, "I will feel very embarrassed if my phone
rings in class."
Vincent Lee, a second-year FBA student,
had a similar feeling. "Sometimes I forgot to turn off my mobile, so when
it rang in class, I felt embarrassed."
Godsey said that she has set a class
rule -- mobile phones and pagers must be turned off during class. And she
is very happy that her students always obey the rule.
Maybe your teachers can forgive you
when your mobile rings again and again in class. But will your boss forgive
you?
A senior officer clerk Peter Fong
has learned it a hard way. He was giving a presentation to his boss during
one of the company meetings when his handset rang suddenly. "My boss got
very angry at that time and asked me to stop my presentation and go away,"
Fong recalled.
"I lost the chance of presentation,"
Fong said.
Would you please turn off your mobile
phone when it is not needed? Respect others, respect yourself.
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