You must be new to the school. ASFS has always cared about tardiness and attendance. The issue now is that there are too many PARENTS who don’t care about tardiness and need a push. Lazy parents are complaining about APS when they are the actual problem here. |
Fake news. |
It is because teachers should begin teaching when that bell rings, not still standing outside helping kids out of cars. If you're dropping off your 6yr old out front and there's no one there can he get himself inside, to his classroom, put away his coat and lunchbox and quietly join circle time with no disruption or adult supervision? I doubt it. |
What in the actual f@C$ is this thread about? Complaining about 5-10 minutes? For a late-starting elementary school? Is your kid really that bothered by this HUGE ask to come just a little bit earlier? Or is this really about parents having to adjust SO much of their morning? I'm all for being critical of people in power, when it's justifiable, but holy hell....this might actually be the most Arlington-thread I've seen in a while. |
So you are new to the school. Got it. ![]() They routinely pushed to cut down on both tardiness and school absences - even calling out parents who took their kids out of school for family trips, etc. Not that you care about facts. |
Entitled people who just like to complain - even though they are the actual problem. |
No she wasn't! |
The issue is not coming 5-10 minutes early. It is not knowing when your own school starts. |
Now imagine the thread if it was about a s. Arl school. |
It's definitely her. |
Sounds like the new principal herself. As several members of the community have noted, she's not emotionally stable. |
This. |
The new principal sucks!! They’ve known since the beginning of the year that there would likely need to be a new fourth grade class (two of the three classes have the same number of kids as the beginning of the year), and they send an email yesterday saying that they got a new teacher and the new classes will be assigned today. One day notice! No asking for volunteers, just an email saying that if you don’t get an email then you are not impacted. What poor planning!!!
I know people will say “it’s fourth grade, who cares”, but that’s assuming you know everything that is happening at home for each of the kids. Late elementary school is when kids can really start to look for school for stability (think of kids who have parents going through a divorce or food instability or any number of other things). It’s also when socially being moved around can have a huge impact on a kids emotional well being— and the kids are old enough to start manifesting real anxiety. It’s unnecessary to just move them, with little to no notice (class rosters are announced today, and the new class starts on Tuesday). Ask for volunteers! Then do a lottery if you don’t get enough of them! Such unnecessary anxiety! When my eldest was in fourth grade at asfs, they created a new class and didn’t have to do a lottery to move kids because people volunteered. This was precovid too when you actually had things like gifted services (now that’s glorified lip service). |
This happened last year in fourth grade under the old principal. It took months to find a teacher, though I think the switch happened in November. To her credit the old principal did give warning and ask for volunteers. But certainly there were kids moved who didn't volunteer, and it all happened fairly quickly once they found a teacher. I think they did what they could to match demographics, needs, etc. to align with distribution in other classes. FWIW the "new" fourth grade teacher last year is now teaching fifth grade, and he seemed/seems very popular with the students. |
You all sound unhinged. Or are you the old principal? See how unhinged that sounds? |