Maybe learn to read better. |
But if MCPS got a better deal by holding ALL the graduations there this year, then it frees up desperately-needed money for the rest of their long to-do list. You seem to have forgotten that your high school is just a small part of a very large, unwieldy and impersonal school system. Everything cannot revolve around your school's needs, and believe me, coming from a very large overcrowded down-county school, everything does not revolve around my children's needs either! This is how it is when your taxes pay for your kids' education, without an extra 60K tuition per kid out of your own pocket every year. I have friends and neighbors who pay that much to attend private school. |
The BOE paid for two graduations to be at Xfinity Center. Blair and WJ. |
Makes sense to me, too. FWIW, my DC's graduation in 2023 was in UMBC. Ours started late because the people for the graduation before us wouldn't clear the venue in time. I hope UMBC does a better job of managing times. |
I know right? ☺️ |
In that case, I feel really bad for anyone who has a graduation scheduling overlap. It seems like schools with magnet programs shouldn’t have their ceremonies scheduled for the same day as any of their feeder schools, but I can’t expect MCPS to take families of multiples into account when scheduling ceremonies. |
For 2025, yes. But for 2026 also? |
I'm not from a small town. I went to a regular sized public HS in a regular sized city, and we had graduation on Friday night in our HS auditorium. As I said, it was my nephews who graduated from a small town. And I never said it was UMBC's fault. Just felt like a crappy cookie cutter end to 13 years of an educational system that started out feeling very nice and community-based but with each year felt more and more bureaucratic and impersonal. But whatever. That's life in the 21st century -- bureaucratic and impersonal. As I said, it might have felt slightly better if it wasn't at 9 a.m. on a Wednesday with everyone rushed to get out so they could get in the next group on the conveyer belt. |
+1 |
Not sure how you know this but it certainly makes a lot of sense. Similar to how MCPS aggressively pushed dual enrolment to boost Montgomery college which was suffering from decreasing enrolment |
Isn’t it sad that schools are built so large these days they aren’t personable? Sort of the bigger issue isn’t it? Probably the reason people go private. Wouldn’t it be nice to not just be a number on a conveyor belt and actual feel appreciated after your 13 years of hard work. Kids are literally celebrating their biggest accomplishment in their young lives. If Damascus holds them in their football stadium, I would imagine their cost is quite low. As for Poolesville, I bet this small town would get parents or businesses to help with the cost of graduation. Those who can’t afford the high price of the majority of housing in Poolesville still manage to have their kid in the magnet program. Many of whom are from down county. Why do they pick Poolesville? Being in Poolesville is just like being in a private school. Yes I know what I’m talking about because I sent a kid through a $60k private school. Also, upcounty residents are just used to consistently getting the shaft because of the center and down county. Only way to fix it is to split the county in half. |
| The email mentions the UMBC venue is better for accessibility. Did anyone have elderly guests with mobility challenges attend a graduation there, and how did it work for them? |
|
WJ is at UMBC this year.
The HSs no longer fit at DAR, and it's a PITA to get there, parking is non existent without paying a fortune, and heaven forbid grandma or grandpa have mobility issues. College Park was too expensive. UMBC is better for parking, you can get more tickets for family members to attend, etc. Way better. |
Yep, Unfortunately, ICE would probably be working the door. |
I think you and the PP tinfoil hats might be too tight |