No thanks. Reduce the summer and you’ll have even more teachers changing careers. |
| Just make it so that having 5 days of school isn't the exception. Is that so hard? I don't care what they need to do to figure that out but having 4 days of school is not ideal--for students --young or old. 2 weeks off in December is ridiculous especially with all the shortened weeks in January. November is a joke. October has been a joke. WHY do they do this??? So we're in school so much of June once AP and SOLs are done????? painful and not necesssary. |
To make summer longer? No thank you. |
Sorry but privates have even more days off! |
I mean, you act like non-Christians don't enjoy or even participate in the Christmas festivities. Sure, they aren't going to church. But they are doing a lot of the other things (my school, friend circle, work place . . . it's all very diverse from all over, many different religions). You don't want to, fine. But, you're not going to change an extended winter break. You're not. If this is the hill you want to die on, you'll get your wish I guess. |
My husband is an atheist and my child has never been to Church but we celebrate Christmas in the secular way. We decorate a tree and buy presents and bake cookies. |
Christian here and I hate the two week winter break. Way too long. I could also do without Veterans and Presidents Day, while I'm slashing and burning
180 days of school was never enough, and that fact is even more glaring in the wake of the pandemic. We should be using federal dollars to pay teachers for 200 days for the next several years. Stop talking about catching up and let's do it. |
200 days is an extra month in school. Very few teachers want that. |
Perhaps some additional instruction in reading comprehension would be helpful to you, for I stated that I spend MOST of the summer on professional reading and planning. This past summer, I read three books about learner-centered instruction, one about elevating student voice, and one about digital citizenship. I also read over 12 young adult novels and memoirs to expand my repertoire of diverse authors. Additionally, I completely redesigned one of our major units and part of a second unit to reflect what I learned about learner-centered instruction and elevating student voice. Yes, I took a short vacation, but I spent, as I do most summers, MOST of the summer working. I'm sorry that it comes as such a shock to you that any teacher would choose to read professional texts that are not assigned by FCPS. I am far from alone in choosing to better myself as a teacher and person by researching, reading, and implementing things that are not assigned to me. In fact, among my colleagues at my school, I am fairly average. Many of us do exactly what I do-- choose to better ourselves as educators by constantly learning. |
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It’s great that the teacher above read some books to improve her teaching and constantly learn.
It’s also great that you got the summer to do it. Lots of professionals also read to keep up with the changing ways of their profession and to constantly learn how to improve. And they’re doing it after work, or on weekends, or when they’re on vacation with their PTO time. I could sit by the pool and go through a couple books per week if I were off all summer. |
"Right around" isn't a day off from a school day. Winter Break has nothing to do with Christmas, and Spring Break is a matter of convenience. Put kids in school on a consistent schedule. |
Sometimes I get a little crazy at the colonizers talk and the white supremacist everything…. But OMG that absolute ignorance in this post that Christian Holidays are part of other breaks BECAUSE THE CHRISTIAN CALENDAR WAS FOR GENERATIONS THE PRIORITIZED CALENDAR. If you can’t grasp that fact….: 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ |
So in other words, a bunch of new age fluff. Not the least of which will be helpful to students or actually improve learner outcomes. I suggest reading actual historical content, focusing on solid content objectives, or brushing up on grammar. So many educators focus on pedagogy and teach incorrect information to students! |
| Look at it this way-it's harder for them to indoctrinate your kids when they are never there for a while week. |
+1 love this!! |