Deep search
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Edison High School, QR and California
California High School Sparks Controversy For Installing QR Codes That Time Bathroom Breaks For Students
A high school in Huntington Beach, California, has replaced hall passes with QR codes when students leave the classroom. This includes the amount of time visiting the nurse, the library, a wellness space or the restroom.
Calif. High School Students Forced to Scan QR Code to Leave Classroom Slam New Policy: 'Unfair'
Jacob Green, a senior at EHS, feels the new policy “is definitely unfair” for students. “Sometimes the bathrooms are closed, and sometimes, we don’t have enough time for the seven-minute limit that we get,” he told KTLA.
Huntington Beach Students at Edison High Raise Privacy Concerns Over School's QR Code Tracking System
Edison High students protest a new QR code system that monitors bathroom usage, citing privacy concerns and rights violations.
A new policy at Edison High School requires students to scan a QR code before using the bathroom
Students at Edison High School in Huntington Beach are expressing their frustration over a new bathroom policy requiring them to use a mobile app to request restroom breaks, leading to the creation of a petition that has garnered over 450 signatures.
California high school requiring students to scan QR codes to leave class
At Edison High School in Huntington Beach, students must download an app and scan a QR code when they leave the classroom for any reason, such as going to the bathroom, or visiting the nurse’s office, the library or the school wellness center. This system tracks how long they’ve been gone and students must scan in again when they return.
Digital hall pass: Orange County school requires students to scan QR code to use bathroom
An Orange County high school has implemented a digital hall pass for students who want to step away from the classroom to use the bathroom. Edison High School’s new policy requires students to download an app and scan a QR code, which is now posted in most of its classrooms.
Orange County high school requiring students to scan a QR code before using the bathroom
A Huntington Beach high school ditched hall passes and replaced them with QR codes, leaving some kids uneasy. "My opinion of this whole scanning into the bathroom is definitely unfair," Edison High School senior Jacob Green said.
Orange County high school requiring students to scan QR codes to leave class
Hall passes seem to be a thing of the past for one high school in Orange County. Now, at Edison High School in Huntington Beach, students must download an app and scan a QR code if they want
3d
Edison High School students raise privacy concerns about restroom guidelines
Students are concerned the new policy violates their privacy, but the principal says it’s a way to keep track of students in ...
LIVE
15h
Los Alamitos High School vs. Edison High School - Huntington Beach Football Live Stream, TV Info - Friday, October 18
Find out how to live stream the Los Alamitos High School vs. Edison High School - Huntington Beach football game on October ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Judge unseals new evidence
Preliminary cause of death
Retiring after 15 seasons
Sells for $9M at auction
Three Americans detained
Donations drop 15%
School shooting indictment
Texas AG sues doctor
Musk's first Trump event
Evidence delay bid denied
La Nina could arrive soon
Eases voting rules
OK classroom Bible suit
US charges ex-Indian spy
Teen anti-sextortion push
TX top court halts execution
Sued for alleged misconduct
988 Lifeline georouting
Dow closes at record high
Colsen fire pits recalled
Space export curbs eased
Teen tobacco use falls
NYC giant pigeon sculpture
Hyundai recalls vehicles
Afghan man denied release
‘Full Self-Driving’ probe
Nevada US Senate debate
Feedback