So what? People can celebrate how they want to. |
Why would there be cords for sports? Also, for those with younger kids who might not know, although FCPS includes an official list of the cords in the program, most of those are purchased by the student, not FCPS. My DC received a service hours cord from FCPS, but her other cords were paid for from the dues to the activity. |
And yet you will no doubt vote them all back in. |
| Graduation is the culmination of your whole childhood chapter. Let them have one moment in time to pull it all together. If they want to wear a cord, let it be. Geez. |
Cords are for service and academics only. Not sports. Girl Scouts/Boy Scouts are about service - that’s why they get cords. |
I will never vote for another FCPS school board candidate with a “D” on their endorsement. The last two all-democrat school boards have been total disasters. |
Actually, my senior received a cord for being a varsity athlete this year, which she was surprised about. 2 years ago, my son at the same school did not receive a varsity athlete cord |
| Where's the list of cords? |
Fine, you can celebrate how you choose. But expecting the schools to host major awards and promotion ceremonies, give trophies for having a pulse, and allow for obscene displays of grandiosity at graduation is out of hand. |
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Several of the graduates at our school wore stoles that were significant to their culture. Examples are that two girls whose parents are from Ghana wore stoles with the colors of the Ghanaian flag, one boy from Hawaii had a beautiful lei.
Why would FCPS deny students and their families this nod to their heritage? |
Athletes who win a state championship should absolutely be allowed to wear their medal. |
+100 |
My kid’s gown was black and I use it as the basis for my Harry Potter Halloween costume. Pin a griffindor crest on it, stuffed owl (from Winnie the Pooh) on my shoulder and draw a scar on my forehead. Only takes a few minutes to put together. |
\ What medal? Don't they get rings? |
Disagree. High school graduation was historically a big deal, because most people never went beyond that (even today, most American adults don’t hold a college degree). And we have a photo of my 80 year old dad in a little cap and gown from his preschool/K graduation. This isn’t new. |