|
This is at DS's upper-mid-tier MCPS high school based on the notices they've sent out. How does this happen? These kids have so many opportunities to get hours and get so many reminders. Parents get a lot of reminders also. These students have had many years to get this done.
If the SSL rule is so hard to get students to comply with, maybe it should just be eliminated. |
|
Parents at your school think that they're special. Just do the hours and stop whining.
- Parent of special needs kid who finished their's by the end of middle school. |
| How do you know how many notices were sent out? My DS is a senior and I haven’t heard a word. Most kids that I know of are way over the required 75. |
I'm OP. My kid took care of theirs by sophomore year. It was so easy I'm surprised others are taking so long. |
OP here. My son had a breakdown of the students that as of now won't graduate. It showed how many had less than 20, 20-30, etc. |
That makes no since as they get like 30-40 hours between middle school and high school classes. |
| There’s like 14 people who work in the SSL office. I think volunteering and service is important, but SSL hours misses the mark a lot of the time. Students earn 45 hours for just taking required classes. I’d be ok with eliminating the requirement and re-assigning the SSL office. |
I should have typed "less than 20 left" rather than "less than 20". Sorry for the confusion. |
I'd be more inclined to keep the requirement if service was actually community service. Instead, though, students can get hours automatically in class or (looking at a recent email) attending a zoom where they "have the opportunity to engage in a youth town hall with Montgomery County councilmembers". |
| It’s a stupid requirement, anyway. |
It really is. Just do away with it and move those resources spent on it to something else. |
Take it up with the state. This is not just a MCPS requirement. |
| My HS gave students 3 hours just for filling out a 15 min survey. |
The idea behind the requirement is not stupid, but the implementation, where schools can have away SSL hours for little to no meaningful service work is. |
Here’s how this happens: 1) Teenagers are lazy. They procrastinate and ignore multiple reminders and opportunities to earn SSL hours because they’d rather blow off the obligation to spend time on TikTok or Instagram. 2) Teenagers are irresponsible. They do the SSL hours but fail to fill and/or turn in the required paperwork to get the credit. |