Those 2-hour delays are great for getting extra work done (grading, photocopying, responding to emails). The school is quiet, so it’s easy to be productive. |
Many professionals have small kids at home and are expected to work on snow days or if there are delays. You sort it out, taking turns with your spouse, paying for childcare, calling grandparents, trading with neighbors, turning on TV as a babysitter, working early before the kids are awake, etc. If teachers want to be considered professionals then they should stop arguing that the same expectations don't apply to them. |
Feeling defensive? There has never been an expectation from FCPS for ANY teacher, with or without children, to work during snow days. |
Nobody is saying that other professions have it easier. And of course other professions face issues with childcare, work outside job hours, etc. But the point here is a teacher’s job is actually designed in a way that requires off-hours to get essential tasks done. When people complain (legitimately) that grading takes a while, they should know why. We receive no time in our 40 work hours to do it. Many of us work 60 and still can’t get it all done. That’s probably happening in other professions, and that’s also not okay. We shouldn’t be championing systems that require so much sacrifice from employees. |
| I didn’t go in at regular time because my kids had a two hour delay too. |
| My HS kid’s grades are all fully updated. We are happy. |
My kids' grades in both MS and HS are also all fully updated. Most of their teachers are very good about keeping grades updated. Essays in social studies and English take a few weeks to get updated, but that's understandable. Everything else usually is updated within 24 hours. |