I’ve got a couple colleagues who sent their kids to public schools and they had to get on a waiting list for aftercare multiple years before kindergarten—one got off the waitlist a week before school started. In our parochial every parent who needs aftercare gets it, and all you have to do is sign up, no waitlist. |
Public schools are required to have 180 days a year. The half days count as full days even if it’s only half instructions. I guess private schools do the same cheap-o thing. |
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So they are not "pro-family" because the kids have early dismissal on:
Halloween (sugar day) Veteran's Day (a Fed holiday) Two days before Thanksgiving (when 1/2 the school is already traveling to be with family) And also, there are half days when most schools have parent/teacher conferences. It sounds like they are trying to work with families to offer time for parenting. Yes, it does stink to assume both parents can drop everything to pick up a kid at lunch a few times a month. It also stinks as a teacher to have to miss out on your own time with your children and extended family b/c schools are not just designed to teach, but to babysit. Some parents hire those after care teachers to babysit on those weird days, as well. Or, they make friends and create a co-op with other parents. |
| Op, where does your after care meet? If the classrooms, where would the teachers conduct their conferences? |
| OP, if you don’t like it, then leave. Simple solution and I would bet there are families who would love to take your place. |
| Sounds like 1/2 day for Halloween, parent teacher conferences, and the day before Thanksgiving break. This is all very typical. |
+1000000 |
| The successful approach here is to partner with another family or two… divide and conquer these half days so you take turns missing work. |
Prince George's County MD. There are private providers, which I mentioned, although they can be very expensive and/or sketchy, but the school, which is currently in a swing space, doesn't have any on site aftercare. They used to have a contract with a provider for on site aftercare, but they didn't have space for all the kids who needed aftercare. I assume they will restart that program or a similar one once they are back in their permanent location. |
Irrelevant point to Catholic schools |
False. And FCPS. Try to be helpful on threads and not combative just to be combative |
If you really believe that, Catholic schools probably aren’t a great fit for many reasons. |
They want kids to spend more time with you. That’s the meaning of “pro family”. They are firmly “pro money”. |
I'm tired of all the a-hats on this thread with this response. This attitude sucks and ignores the reality that the school day has never been updated to reflect the reality of a world where many, many families have two working parents. The typical workday is 8-5. Why has our society continued to penalize working parents with a bizarre practice of having school end several hours after the workday? Or not at least having aftercare in place at every school until at least 5:30-6 on weekdays. Stop pretending this isn't BS. |
Several hours BEFORE the workday ends. Whoops. |