What do Florida schools have to do with MoCo? Is the FL system suddenly well regarded? |
My daughter attends a private that starts after Labor Day. Always has. They also have cycles in which they only have their major classes 4 out of 6 days. So technically, they have much less class time than any public school, even one that starts after Labor Day. They never have anyone get below a 3 and rarely have anyone get below a 4. Boarding schools tend to start mid September and they do AP's too. No issue. AP's are not that hard. They are one semester college courses. If you can't teach them in an entire school year, you shouldn't be taking the AP. |
You do realize that you would have only started 4 days earlier because of Eid? And 3 of those days would have been teacher service days for all 3 quarters. So starting after Labor Day gets your child 1 extra school day. Nice try though. You should be 100% against an 11 day Spring Break in April then, correct? I would think that would affect the AP curriculum and testing in early May. |
They really should get rid of the days between Christmas and New Years too. They're not even holidays. |
Weekends off too. 180 days straight, starting the day after Labor Day and ending in early March. Let spring and summer be spring and summer. |
OMG. Mamma and Pappa could use a break! Send the kids to school on Saturday and Sunday and get the $h!t done that we need to get done without those whiney little suckers making a mess around the house. Booyah! |
I think the point is 12 weeks of summer is the norm across the country except at small pockets that do year round school. But you knew that. Do you think MCPS is well regarded? lol |
I doubt that it is the norm. |
Actually, yes. MCPS is well regarded by everyone else who does live in a rich neighborhood in Montgomery County. |
| 12 weeks of summer is not the norm. |
May 31st, 2017, to August 14th, 2017 (the Orange County, Florida, school calendar) is 10.5 weeks of vacation, not 12 (actually 75 days). This is very similar to what MCPS used to have. On the other hand, June 15, 2018, to September 3, 2018 (the mandated MD summer break) is 11.5 weeks, also not 12 (actually 81 days). Although MCPS may end up with closer to 12 weeks since the last day of school is scheduled for June 12 to allow for makeup days. At least do the math right if you are going to bring in comparisons with other parts of the country. |
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MCPS has 11 weeks of summer in 2018. That seems very normal. For those that think most school districts are far less than that, please point them out because Mid June to Labor Day seems to be what most Northeast schools do. Those warm weather districts go mid August to Memorial Day. Same amount of time. The schools that start in late Aug get done a little earlier or have many more days off. I for one do not like that. We have family in FCPS and they hate their calendar. They had to fight like mad just a few years ago to get rid of half day Fridays. EVERY Friday was a half day.
The only reason FCPS started a week earlier is because they were getting done in late June because their county takes off if is below 30, flurries, or a bus can't start which seems to happen more often than not. I am pretty sure last year the last day was June 27th. This year they start on Aug 28th and get done June 15th with no snow days yet added in. They get off Dec 16th to Jan 2nd for winter break They get off March 24th to April 3rd for spring break They get off for 2 days after every quarter for "student holiday" They also get multiple other holidays off including Columbus Day. My sister complains that they only have 23 full weeks of school out of 44 weeks. As a working mom, it is extremely hard for her. She also hates having the week before Christmas off because she can't afford to take both weeks off and has to pay for a one week camp which is pricy. So I guess you just can't please everyone. Not everyone wants random days sprinkled off all year. Some want it all in one lump in the summer. I am one of those moms. Some of you aren't. MCPS can not please everyone. But like another poster said, if we started Aug 28th this year, we would have been off for Eid that very first week and people would have been annoyed at that. Damn if you do, damn if you don't. |
It's 12 weeks. Check again. |
| As a public high school teacher, I love the after Labor Day start to the school year. Whereas it usually takes my students a couple of weeks to exit summer mode, this year they came into the classroom with a different attitude. They had enjoyed a full summer and it seemed natural and appropriate to get down to fall business after Labor Day. I felt the same way, as did my own kids. Now I look forward to a school year where we are finally seeing our students for full five day weeks most of the time. I can plan and teach without the constant disruption of single days off here and there. I know others have posted that they enjoy having many single days off throughout the year to provide breaks for kids, but as a teacher I find these days to be very disruptive to the learning process. I'd much rather review a bit with students after a long summer and then take off on my curriculum than to deal with constant disruptions throughout the year. |
| School should never art before Labor Day. I absolutely abhorred the years when it started the week before. Complete insanity. Nothing is wrong with shorter school year and less contact days. Longer spring and winter break too. It isn't about days is about teaching effectively. Prior to MCPS my kids attended British International School, started around 1st of September and ended by early June. Had over 2 weeks for Christmas breaks and almost as much for Easter. And learned a ton more But, unless government demanded this and that holiday must be no school days, kids went to school. There were no random days off. |