The dumbing down of America. |
You need to reread. Your reading comprehension is 0/100. But your gen z lingo is A+, so you’ve got something going for you. |
We have mostly walkers in my school and a high level of low income families and MLLs. I had a lot of kids out and my observation are they are the kids who have no car, low academically, and parents are not involved in school (I’ve never seen them, they don’t show up for conferences, won’t return calls, etc).
Needless to say I didn’t teach a lot of new lessons because I would have to repeat it all Monday since these are the kids who really need it and can’t just miss a lesson. So it was a mostly low key fun day. Unfortunately our school struggles with chronic absenteeism so days like yesterday don’t help and I really really hope we have a normal day on Monday. |
PP here (the HS teacher). No one is expecting medals. I am just cautioning parents against infantalizing their kids and not allowing/encouraging them to solve problems and take risks (e.g. walking a mile to school in the cold and ice). I have been teaching for over 25 years, and I do believe that the trend of over-protecting kids is damaging their mental health. |
4th grader said everyone was there. Glad they reopened to get new content going before next week. |
Our family was just talking about the jitters kids feel before going back after a break. I’m so glad they went Friday to get that out of the way.
Re attendance: My first grader has no idea how many kids were absent on Friday. My fifth grader had two classmates absent. |
The transition after a break is always hard- nobody looks forward to that first day back. The kids and staff who went on Friday and ripped off that bandaid are going to feel a lot more at ease going back tomorrow compared to the kids who stayed home and are now jumping into a 5 day week after 3 weeks at home without the benefit of the shorter “ease in” day on Friday. Oh well. |
https://wtop.com/virginia/2025/01/in-va-crews-work-to-make-neighborhood-streets-passable-instead-of-clear/
The standard for side streets is that an emergency vehicle can get through, not clear to pavement. |
Thank you for posting this. So many people are screaming about their streets "not being plowed," but they mostly certainly have been plowed... once or twice on Mon or Tues, leaving behind a layer of packed snow and ice that kept refreezing. That's what always happens on lightly traveled subdivision roads with unusually cold Jan temps. |
Republicans love the uneducated.... |
People start driving on our street as soon as it is plowed and I am pretty sure that the traffic helps to break up the snow pack over time. Yes, it compresses it, but the consistent driving breaks off chunks and causes it to spread out and break up. We ended up with one path that is pretty clear immediately after and pretty much clear by Wednesday afternoon, some ruts and the like, due to use of the street. |
So how do you explain FCPS and it’s SB? |
They know the difference between it’s and its, for one thing. |
Yes, this! The roads have been plowed but VDOT never promised to plow to bare asphalt. Maybe that’s not good enough but that’s what the current rule is. The truth is we usually warm up and it melts in a day or two. It’s not that VDOT did better in the past. |
Can you believe we are going on time tomorrow? It is not safe. Trust me, my family has been all around town this weekend running errands, sledding, seeing friends, and it’s still slick. So trust me I know. I haven’t been just sitting at home. I’ve been out doing normal activities. We need another snow day or at least a late start. Reid has caved to the crazy parents that don’t want their kids at home. SMH. |