does your kid's school require them to wear jackets at recess?

Anonymous
This gets emailed out by our principal every year:

At [X school], we have a 50 degree policy for participating in activities outside of the school. If it is under 50 degrees at the time of the activity, students need to have a coat/jacket/sweatshirt/hoodie AND have on pants or sweats (no shorts or skirts/dresses).
FCPS Fact Sheet SEH-23:

HOW COLD IS TOO COLD TO ALLOW STUDENTS TO PLAY OUTDOORS?

During typical winter days, common sense requires us to look beyond a specific temperature and consider factors such as wind chill, whether the ground is frozen or the sun is shining, how well the children are prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats), what activity the children are participating in, and the length of time to be spent outside. Deciding when students may play outdoors remains the responsibility of the principal, based on his or her professional judgment after considering the information provided in this fact sheet. Principals should communicate with their community that it
is the intention of the school to hold recess during cold spells and that parents should have their children prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats).

Based on the above guideline, I worked with the region office several years back to create a policy that would be consistent and easy to follow for staff, students, and parents. While 50 degrees may feel very different depending on the cloud cover and wind, etc., having a consistent temperature guideline was easiest for everyone's planning. Please note, according to the chart above, students can have a 30 minute outdoor activity when the weather is BELOW zero!! We ask our teachers to use their professional judgements when deciding on outdoor recess, PE outside, and any other outdoor activities!

Our school policy states:

When temperatures drop below 50 degrees we do not allow students who are not wearing pants/sweats and a warm jacket/hooded sweatshirt to go outside for any outdoor activity. Students without appropriate covering will be brought to the office or library where they can read until their class returns.

Please let me know if you have any questions!
Anonymous
Teacher here. I make the kids wear jackets when it is cold, but they don’t have to zip them up. The ones that say they aren’t cold and don’t have a jacket come inside after recess and are freezing and can’t focus on their work. If it’s warmer, I let them take it off. I figure if a second grader’s parent sent them to school in a jacket, they want them to wear it. I don’t want any kid to be sweating like crazy and too hot, but if you send a coat and it’s winter, I ask them to wear it. And please please, put names in coats and sweatshirts!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This gets emailed out by our principal every year:

At [X school], we have a 50 degree policy for participating in activities outside of the school. If it is under 50 degrees at the time of the activity, students need to have a coat/jacket/sweatshirt/hoodie AND have on pants or sweats (no shorts or skirts/dresses).
FCPS Fact Sheet SEH-23:

HOW COLD IS TOO COLD TO ALLOW STUDENTS TO PLAY OUTDOORS?

During typical winter days, common sense requires us to look beyond a specific temperature and consider factors such as wind chill, whether the ground is frozen or the sun is shining, how well the children are prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats), what activity the children are participating in, and the length of time to be spent outside. Deciding when students may play outdoors remains the responsibility of the principal, based on his or her professional judgment after considering the information provided in this fact sheet. Principals should communicate with their community that it
is the intention of the school to hold recess during cold spells and that parents should have their children prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats).

Based on the above guideline, I worked with the region office several years back to create a policy that would be consistent and easy to follow for staff, students, and parents. While 50 degrees may feel very different depending on the cloud cover and wind, etc., having a consistent temperature guideline was easiest for everyone's planning. Please note, according to the chart above, students can have a 30 minute outdoor activity when the weather is BELOW zero!! We ask our teachers to use their professional judgements when deciding on outdoor recess, PE outside, and any other outdoor activities!

Our school policy states:

When temperatures drop below 50 degrees we do not allow students who are not wearing pants/sweats and a warm jacket/hooded sweatshirt to go outside for any outdoor activity. Students without appropriate covering will be brought to the office or library where they can read until their class returns.

Please let me know if you have any questions!


Because some religions require girls to wear skirts and dresses, this violates the constitution.
Anonymous
This might sound crazy, but I worked at an elementary school and saw a huge correlation between non-jacket wearing at freezing temps and hyperactivity/ inappropriate behaviors. Off topic observation. And the idea that we could make the hyperactive kid put his coat on during recess is laughable. I'm glad mom and dad never asked for that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This gets emailed out by our principal every year:

At [X school], we have a 50 degree policy for participating in activities outside of the school. If it is under 50 degrees at the time of the activity, students need to have a coat/jacket/sweatshirt/hoodie AND have on pants or sweats (no shorts or skirts/dresses).
FCPS Fact Sheet SEH-23:

HOW COLD IS TOO COLD TO ALLOW STUDENTS TO PLAY OUTDOORS?

During typical winter days, common sense requires us to look beyond a specific temperature and consider factors such as wind chill, whether the ground is frozen or the sun is shining, how well the children are prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats), what activity the children are participating in, and the length of time to be spent outside. Deciding when students may play outdoors remains the responsibility of the principal, based on his or her professional judgment after considering the information provided in this fact sheet. Principals should communicate with their community that it
is the intention of the school to hold recess during cold spells and that parents should have their children prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats).

Based on the above guideline, I worked with the region office several years back to create a policy that would be consistent and easy to follow for staff, students, and parents. While 50 degrees may feel very different depending on the cloud cover and wind, etc., having a consistent temperature guideline was easiest for everyone's planning. Please note, according to the chart above, students can have a 30 minute outdoor activity when the weather is BELOW zero!! We ask our teachers to use their professional judgements when deciding on outdoor recess, PE outside, and any other outdoor activities!

Our school policy states:

When temperatures drop below 50 degrees we do not allow students who are not wearing pants/sweats and a warm jacket/hooded sweatshirt to go outside for any outdoor activity. Students without appropriate covering will be brought to the office or library where they can read until their class returns.

Please let me know if you have any questions!


That's fine, but fully half those kids will wear the coat while transitioning outside and then dump it on the blacktop for the next 30 minutes while they play in short sleeves. 2-3 adults cannot follow 100+ kids around telling them to put coats back on.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This might sound crazy, but I worked at an elementary school and saw a huge correlation between non-jacket wearing at freezing temps and hyperactivity/ inappropriate behaviors. Off topic observation. And the idea that we could make the hyperactive kid put his coat on during recess is laughable. I'm glad mom and dad never asked for that.


Teacher here. Now that you mention it, I do too. The kids who show up without jackets, etc tend to be kids with difficult behavior. I imagine mornings in their house can be a nightmare so the parents take the path of least resistance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP you have to understand that schools will never win with parents. Some parents would freak out if their child wasn’t made to wear a jacket when it’s 60 degrees out and some get mad that their kid was made to wear a jacket when it’s 60 degrees out. They have to choose a one size fits all policy made with health and safety in mind and it’s never going to make everyone happy.


How about a policy of letting kids be responsible for small decisions, when the stakes are small - like getting cold when they aren't wearing coat.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I would send an email to the teacher saying "Please allow my daughter to wear her jacket or not as she wishes."

I doubt it's really a "rule."


As long as your email says “and I won’t complain if it’s lost repeatedly” I am good with that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This gets emailed out by our principal every year:

At [X school], we have a 50 degree policy for participating in activities outside of the school. If it is under 50 degrees at the time of the activity, students need to have a coat/jacket/sweatshirt/hoodie AND have on pants or sweats (no shorts or skirts/dresses).
FCPS Fact Sheet SEH-23:

HOW COLD IS TOO COLD TO ALLOW STUDENTS TO PLAY OUTDOORS?

During typical winter days, common sense requires us to look beyond a specific temperature and consider factors such as wind chill, whether the ground is frozen or the sun is shining, how well the children are prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats), what activity the children are participating in, and the length of time to be spent outside. Deciding when students may play outdoors remains the responsibility of the principal, based on his or her professional judgment after considering the information provided in this fact sheet. Principals should communicate with their community that it
is the intention of the school to hold recess during cold spells and that parents should have their children prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats).

Based on the above guideline, I worked with the region office several years back to create a policy that would be consistent and easy to follow for staff, students, and parents. While 50 degrees may feel very different depending on the cloud cover and wind, etc., having a consistent temperature guideline was easiest for everyone's planning. Please note, according to the chart above, students can have a 30 minute outdoor activity when the weather is BELOW zero!! We ask our teachers to use their professional judgements when deciding on outdoor recess, PE outside, and any other outdoor activities!

Our school policy states:

When temperatures drop below 50 degrees we do not allow students who are not wearing pants/sweats and a warm jacket/hooded sweatshirt to go outside for any outdoor activity. Students without appropriate covering will be brought to the office or library where they can read until their class returns.

Please let me know if you have any questions!


Because some religions require girls to wear skirts and dresses, this violates the constitution.


Name the religion that prohibits girls from wearing leggings or pants under their dress.
Anonymous
I remind the kids to grab their jackets when it’s cold out. However, the only time as a teacher I say “this is non-negotiable and you must wear something” is when it’s 20-40 degrees.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Or do they let them listen to their own body signals? My kid (3rd grader) came home from school today talking about how annoying it is that she was forced to wear her coat at recess since she only had short sleeves on underneath. She is running around and it's not that cold, and said she would've been fine without her jacket but when she took it off the supervisor told her she needed to put it back on and she said "but I'm hot" and she said "put your coat on now. It's a rule."


Send a note to the school nurse and principal that your child can regulate their own body temperature, and can be allowed out at recess with no coat. Problem solved (had to do this for my 4th grader 11 years ago!)
Anonymous
At our public school, I just tell them what I think. "Its pretty cold outside, you will probably want your coat." And they see me gearing up. Most will then bring their coat but if they don't that's on them. If a kid is constantly complaining about being cold, or asking to return to the room mid recess to get her coat, then yes I'd probably make that particular student take a coat outside. How do you make a child wear a coat though?
Anonymous
I supervised my kindergarten class at recess last year and my only rule was that if you wore your jacket outside it had to stay on. Too many kids would forget their jackets or swing them around/play tug of war.
Anonymous
Yes they do!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This gets emailed out by our principal every year:

At [X school], we have a 50 degree policy for participating in activities outside of the school. If it is under 50 degrees at the time of the activity, students need to have a coat/jacket/sweatshirt/hoodie AND have on pants or sweats (no shorts or skirts/dresses).
FCPS Fact Sheet SEH-23:

HOW COLD IS TOO COLD TO ALLOW STUDENTS TO PLAY OUTDOORS?

During typical winter days, common sense requires us to look beyond a specific temperature and consider factors such as wind chill, whether the ground is frozen or the sun is shining, how well the children are prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats), what activity the children are participating in, and the length of time to be spent outside. Deciding when students may play outdoors remains the responsibility of the principal, based on his or her professional judgment after considering the information provided in this fact sheet. Principals should communicate with their community that it
is the intention of the school to hold recess during cold spells and that parents should have their children prepared to play outdoors (jackets, gloves, and hats).

Based on the above guideline, I worked with the region office several years back to create a policy that would be consistent and easy to follow for staff, students, and parents. While 50 degrees may feel very different depending on the cloud cover and wind, etc., having a consistent temperature guideline was easiest for everyone's planning. Please note, according to the chart above, students can have a 30 minute outdoor activity when the weather is BELOW zero!! We ask our teachers to use their professional judgements when deciding on outdoor recess, PE outside, and any other outdoor activities!

Our school policy states:

When temperatures drop below 50 degrees we do not allow students who are not wearing pants/sweats and a warm jacket/hooded sweatshirt to go outside for any outdoor activity. Students without appropriate covering will be brought to the office or library where they can read until their class returns.

Please let me know if you have any questions!


Because some religions require girls to wear skirts and dresses, this violates the constitution.


Can you name a religion that requires girls to have bare legs under their skirt?
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