• Numbered for each pocket, easy to match the numbered desk and find their cell phones;
  • Each pocket size fits even the largest models of cell phones;
  • Comes with 4 hooks that let it hang from silver/metal bar thingy at the top of the white board or over the door;
  • For store students cell phones and small calculators organizer;
  • 30 pockets phone storage, Measurements: 25 1/2 * 33 1/2 inches. Ideal for school, classroom, meeting room, university, dormitory storage.

I was looking for a calculator organizer i could use in my classroom as a cellphone parking lot/charging station. This works perfectly. The kids put their phones in the pockets and plug them in during class. It has freed up my lab space and my kids aren't constantly checking their phones. It is the perfect length so it isn't dragging on the floor from the lab bench. I purchased it with a power strip :-) the kids are actually psyched to use it. I have a whole classroom full of calculators in it when class is in session

I needed to come up with a better solution to keep cell phone problems out of my classroom and this pocket chart did just that. The students can not have access to their cell phones during any of my classes so many of them were piling them up on my desk before class. That drove me crazy because I was worried about them falling onto the floor and they kept getting in my way. Other students would sneak their phones into the classroom and keep them in their pockets or pencil bags. So I decided to kill 2 birds with one stone: stop the cell phone problem and help my students keep their batteries charged! This pocket chart is VERY strong and durable. It also holds ALL sizes of phones in and out of cases with room to spare. I’d recommend these charts to anyone! My students LOVE their new charging stations! :)

I used this numbered pocket chart as a cell phone holder for my high school classroom. Student desks are assigned numbers and those numbers correspond to the cell phone "charging" pocket located near my desk. I have a surge protector attached to my bulletin board and "gift" my students with electricity. The students arrive and plug in their phone and slip the phone into the assigned number pocket. My rules: 1. All phones must be in the pocket before the bell rings. 2. Charging outlets are first come, first served...it encourages them to arrive to class early. 3. Do unto others...you may not touch the charger or phone of another student. This has cut down on the snapchat and various other distractions our school's cell phone policy allows. I always give the students time at the end of class to collect phones.

I was looking for something to keep my class set of calculators in that would double as a cell phone holder. This is perfect. I ordered the chart which arrived in a timely manner, and I was impressed with the good quality for the price I paid. Because I'm nearly our of room on my walls, I bought an inexpensive clothes rack from walmart ($10) and metal shower curtain rings. I now have a stand on wheels to move around and collect calculators. It's worked out far better than I ever imagined.

This product appeared exactly as shown, and it solved my classroom cell phone issue. Some of our teachers ordered the pockets with clear windows, but both works well for us. The pocket chart hangs easily from the edge of my bulletin board, and it works as well hanging on a door. I have had no problems with it falling down. I ordered an outlet tower for students to charge their phones while hanging in the pockets. (Took the "sting" out of putting their phones away during class.) I wish I had ordered this months ago.

I am a high school teacher who learned this idea from a fellow teacher: Each student in every class has an assigned number. At the beginning of class, they place their phone in their slot. Some time during class, I check off on my cell phone sheet that they have detached from their phone this day. An accumulation of 80% (16 of 20) earns them a drop of their lowest grade. Not surprisingly, they are more focused and grades are less of the issue for class work when they are separated from their phones. Multiple issues that encompass a full article: what about theft, what about using phones for classwork (research eg), what about students who do not have a phone or who already have the maturity to leave it in their locker . . . You must fit this to your own classroom and other teachers have other ways to deal with it. I am finding that especially for younger high schoolers without the self-discipline, this teaches them that they can live without their phone for 90 minutes. A valuable lesson!

I love this! I love the way I have the students WANTING to put their phones in it. At the beginning of the hour, students put their phones in thepockets. At the end of the hour, i use a random number generator select a number from 1-30. If a student's phone is in that pocket, they can draw a prize from my prize jar. Prizes include: 2 extra credit points, bring a snack to class, sit wherever you want, get a piece of candy, permission to turn in a late assignment 2 days late with no penalty, and a free No Homework day. So far, so goof.

This has been a lifesaver! I use this in my high school class for phones and it has eliminated so much time spent on telling students to put their phones away. Students know they are expected to put them in their pocket when the enter the classroom and that I take attendance based on whose phone is in their pocket. Since they don't want that absent email sent to their parents, they make sure it's in there! I also match their phone pocket number to their desk number so that if there phone isn't in the pocket before I take attendance I know exactly whose is missing and can remind them before I submit attendance. The pockets are very durable. I've had it for 3 years now and haven't noticed any tearing or ripping. Definitely recommend it to any teacher looking for a cell phone holder for the class.

As a teacher of 75 teenage boys, this has saved my sanity: they come in the classroom and put their phones in the pouches. It saves yelling, confiscation, unhappy kids, unhappy parents; you know the drill if you're a teacher. Note: The top rungs do fit over the door when you hang it, but be aware that your door will not close on its own, you have to give it a push. And the epilogue is that the boys who so heavily depend on their phones have discovered that they can survive without them, when they accidentally leave my class without them and return at the end of the day to collect them. Not exactly a teachable moment, but something, just the same.

I am using this with 9th graders to collect cell phones at the start of class; I will find out as the year goes by how the product (and the procedure of having 9th graders do this) hold up. :-) At first inspection, however, I have no worries that this product will last many years to come. The fabric is thick and the item itself is well made - looks like good stitching. The numbers are clear and it is really nice. Functions exactly like an over-the-door shoe organizer so I imagine it will do well. Shipped fast, arrived nicely packaged. Can't wait to use it!