Look at the calendar again. It is NOT a day off. No where does it say it is a day off. Please link the calendar. |
My dad was from the Gulf Coast of Mississippi. Protestant. We did not live there, but every November 1 he went down there to take his aunt to the cemetery to clean off the graves. However, it was a custom of the area and likely came from New Orleans. Not sure if it was a holiday, but no one in our family went to church that day. Just cleaned off the graves. This is not needed for a day off and has not been a day off. We have likely had it off as a teacher workday at the end of the quarter. |
| I’m a family of very devout Catholics and I went to catholic school. All Saints’ Day is not a major religious holiday. Even Ash Wednesday wasn’t a day off school. we all showed off our ashes at school and work |
Well not this year. Duh. It’s a Saturday |
+1, last year it was on the same day as Diwali. |
| These all used to be O days and that worked out fine. Colleges don’t give these days off and they work out fine. The SB wanted to appeal to their voters and the teacher unions and they don’t care about what parents actually want so they switched it. |
I'm so confused. Do you really not believe that we have a lot of students from South/Central America in FCPS? Do you really not realize that many of the immigrants from South/Central America are Catholic? |
| I love this for my HSers. They need breaks. Their course loads are insane! |
It’s a day of obligation. It makes sense that catholic schools aren’t off. They are supposed to be there. lol. Why would the have the day off and then just tell them all to come back? |
Sounds like a time management issue for them. |
We know you're confused, because you've gone from South American, to Latino, to South/Central American students. None of these are the same. And there certainly aren't enough of them to justify closing schools. |
Well it frequently falls on a Saturday or Sunday for the next couple years, so jumping ahead you can see in 2027-28 it’s off. There was a bunch of talk at the SB meeting when they added this. They decided to give it off for the holiday, but line it up every year as the official end of the quarter (you’ll notice every other quarter moves end dates a bit from year to year, except the first to accomodate this) The SB meetings are all online you can still find it I’m sure but I’m not digging around for it. https://www.fcps.edu/system/files/forms/2025-02/2027-2028-standard-school-year-calendar.pdf |
Maybe not where your kids go to school. At the last 2 schools that I’ve taught at (30 minutes apart), they make-up 30-50% of the population. One year, I had 3 white students. |
Ding! Ding! Ding! It follows the quarter end. Friday before is Diwali which is listed as a holiday. Monday, Nov 1 is a "School Planning Day" and Nov 2 is a "Teacher Workday," which is traditional at the end of the quarter. And, if it was a holiday on a prior year, it is because it was Quarter end Teacher Workday. It has never been a school holiday because of religion. Not in FCPS. |
Incorrect. When the day off is due that day for the sole reason that it’s a religious holiday, you’ll see it marked with only an “H”. There is no calendar where All Saints Day has an “H” and there never has been. In the 27-28 calendar, you’ll see that Nov 1 is a day where no students attend. AND it is acknowledged below that Nov 1 is All Saints Day. FCPS does acknowledge this is a holiday for some. BUT the day on the calendar is marked with an SP which stands for School Planning Day. That means that school is not closed for students because it’s a religious holiday but because it’s a workday for staff. |