| There was no need for the delay, roads were fine. It's ridiculous that superintendents make the call the night before rather than the morning of, as weather conditions can change on the dime. Another example of how loud parents have intimidated leaders into making BS decisions. |
So many systems delayed at the same time. Maybe it came from the stae to keep people off the road. |
Or, here's an idea, if your kids need extra sleep put them to bed earlier. |
I’m a teacher. My own teens are early birds and up at 5:30 AM even on the weekends, but most adolescents can’t fall asleep early even without screens or other temptations. Eventually MCPS won’t let the bus budget stand in the way of bell times supported by neuroscience. |
Did you see the ice on the trees up-county? Frederick Co was a complete mess. We were a few miles away from being a mess, too. AM rush hour events are the hardest to call. |
Sounds like you are making excuses as a parent. The issue with starting high school later is many kids have after school activities and jobs. For us, even with activities and getting out at 3 PM, kids can still be up till 11 or so doing homework. There would be no way to make it work if kids got out at 4-5PM. |
No, it's not an excuse. There's solid evidence adolescents have a later circadian rhythm. https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=pubmed+adolescent+sleep+patterns+circadian+timing&hl=en&as_sdt=0&as_vis=1&oi=scholart |
If schools make the call the night before, the response is: BOO, TERRIBLE, THEY CALLED IT TOO EARLY, BOO, TERRIBLE! If schools wait until the morning to make the call, the response is: BOO, TERRIBLE, THEY CALLED IT TOO LATE, BOO, TERRIBLE! |
Exactly. These people who are complaining that it was called the night before - do they have younger kids and forget that school delays/closings used to be called at 5 am? Of if their kids are older, did they also complain about making the call at 5 am? |