I have this end time and mentioned it to a teacher friend across the country (elementary) (they start at 7:40 and end at 2:35) NORMAL... What kid is getting home at nearly 5 pm? Just MoCo... Yes, later start times for older kids but most elementary kids are already awake. The board is so out of touch with reality. |
It's fine. Much ado about nothing. |
Not just MCPSS. My kids in Howard County started at 9:24 a.m and got home around 4:20 p.m. on the bus. To say that I hated that arrangement is a massive understatement. The kids were up well before 7:00 a.m. and it was hard to use that extra time in a productive was. I mean playing outside at 7:00 a.m. isn't really a thing. |
Many in the transportation industry starts earlier than that. That includes your Drivers, conductors, mechanics, station managers, track repair staff, managers, and more. The. There are those in all sectors of health care, those in construction, those in the trades, those who deliver your Amazon packages, and so many more. 7:45 really isn’t that early for the working world. |
Aww, bc the poster used a capital S to emphasize your own stupidity? They didnt use an apostrophe bc functioning adults understand? But yoooou win! (those extra letters mean emphasis, bc clearly you dont understand) |
DH's HS school started at 9.. in the uK. They still do, I think. CA just passed a law that HS cannot start earlier than 8:30. The only countries that force kids to start early are those that are either 1. insane about education like China 2. it's too hot in the afternoon, like Brazil. |
If HSers want to do sports, they should be the ones waking up early to practice before school starts. Swimmers do it. Why should all HSers suffer an early start time because some HSers want to play sports? It's not the devices. My teens are off their device before 11pm. The 14 yr old goes to bed around 9:30ish. The 17 yr old told me that it doesn't matter if they go to bed early or not - whether 10pm or midnight.. they have a hard time getting up early. DC said most of the kids in first period are still half alseep. I'm betting if they pushed the start time later, a lot of kids grades would improve. |
How about the ones who have early morning jobs, or farm chores, or swim/hockey/skating practice, or elder care duties, or pet care duties, or food prep duties, or water hauling duties, or the million other things that teens around the world wake up early to do every day? What the AAP actually recommends is that kids get enough sleep. For teens, 8-10 hours. They do suggest an 8:30 start time for schools, but they also say, "If schools start earlier, parents should make sure their children go to bed early enough to get the recommended amount of sleep...." so, the AAP knows an early start time isn't possible for everyone. The fact that you use the word "punishing" suggests that you are not of a rational mind about this issue though. |
I was only pointing out that though her body might want to sleep til 11:30, she does fine when forced to wake up much earlier. She doesn’t get home til nearly 5 pm most days. She’s cheerful and doing well in school. Her phone shuts off at 9 pm, so if yours are having trouble, maybe try that. |
The teens will be fine. Mlionsnof teens who went to school early are fine. MoCo looked at this already, and changed the time of HS start by 20 minutes. They cannot move them any more. Yous are not the only teens out there. MANY teens in the county watch/babysit younger siblings after ES while their parents work. MANY teens work after school to support their families. And many other reasons. They aren't going to change it to start later |
I’m a teacher and I have to be at school at 7:30 everyday. |
They’re not fine, but we have no other options, so we’ll keep limping along. |
My kid isn’t using her phone after 9pm, is getting straight A’s in a magnet program, and has to be out the door by 6:35 to catch her bus. She’s cheerful most hours out of the day…but not from 6-8:00am. By Friday nights she’s a zombie. If we have special weekend plans that prevent her from getting caught up on her sleep, the next week is really tough. She’s physically and mentally healthy, doing well in school, and has a happy social life, but she’s tired. Is the early start time going to break her? No, she’ll survive it like we did. But is it fine? No, it’s not. A later start time would be better. It may not be feasible, but it would be better. |
MCPS has always been this early. |
My high school started at 7:30 and it sucked. I was an excellent student but I had a hard time staying awake in class.
I know a lot of districts around the country no longer do this, as I had thought the question of circadian rhythms was largely settled science. My kids are young now and I see the same science used to advocate for kids as old as age 7/8 going to bed by 8:30. (I know not everyone accomplishes this, but in general there is research to back up the idea that earlier is better for little kids.) We recently moved to MoCo and since I'm about to have a baby and will be staying at home, I'm rather pleased I won't have to scramble out the door to get my kindergartener to school at the crack of dawn. BUT I agree with those who feel this is backward in general. It will work for my family but the 3:50 elementary school dismissal time also really kills the afternoon for littles who need to eat dinner earlier and go to bed earlier. |