Because I actually attended.school. We didn't have spring break nor did teachers get a "work day" at the end of each grading period. |
The more you pay, the more you play. |
Sports drives the school schedule, good grief |
| My guess is that (if your school is like ours), the extra days tacked on aren't days off for staff; they're professional development days. So the school staff are still working, but they're doing things that they can't do with the kids there. Public schools have them too (even more of them, in fact, where we live--plus the kids get out early one day every week for the whole year!) I actually appreciate that our school coordinates them with breaks vs. the random days off that friends have in public. |
I would love for our school systems to adopt this. I think kids would actually be more motivated. |
Omg, my british husband would watch so many movies at home on his breaks... it was not like young kids were going in 4-5 three week vacations a year or doing mini internships. He would just work out and watch movies. School system very different there w A levels and only four subjects the last two years of HS. Also the application process to colleges- test scores, transcript, interview is another academic test, plus HoS politics telling you where to or not apply. The in university it is teach-yourself and discuss with your small team. And they finally got some career services going the last few years as well as endowments since it is no longer 100% taxpayer funded— that only lasted 15-20 years before the budget blew out. |
I don't know how the school feels, but I feel sheepish when I put in time off requests at my job. I'm glad they build in professional days, but it does feel like a schedule built by a community with a lot of SAHMs. |