Which could become paid TW days, maintaining the school week kids need and the planning time teachers need. Snow days could become telework days and some of the training needs could be met in those days— exactly the way they are in many professional settings. Treating teachers as though they are incapable isn’t doing anything for the profession. |
My kids are in all AP and Honors classes on high school. They have plenty of material. |
I honestly think this is the answer. Having days off or early releases is fine, especially if the teachers need it. The issue is the constant disruption it causes to families (for all sorts of reasons) and the constant scrambling. So many people are in survivor mode and this is just one more thing on top of the "mountain of things" that need to be handled. Money is definitely an issue but I think many parents would be willing to work around cost and find solutions if it meant having one less major stressor. Just think about how much easier things would be if families knew that, no matter what, kids *could* be in school Monday through Friday from August to June. The solutions could be endless. Schools could offer things like mini-camps, tutoring, enrichment programs, gym or playground time, movie days, read-ins, guest lectures, special assemblies, field trips, mentor programs, community service or structured free time where students can dive deeper into interests they enjoy. Other options could include special projects, student clubs, creative writing, public speaking, piano lessons, sports, photography, and more. Staffing could come from a mix of employees, contractors, volunteers, parents, substitute teachers, and local businesses in the community. Funding could also come from multiple sources, including tax dollars, grants, and private payments, with support built in for families who could not afford it. Many kid-focused businesses would jump at the chance to offer free or low-cost programs simply for the exposure. Traditional advertising is expensive and the return is unpredictable, so having direct access to families would be extremely appealing to many organizations. |
All great points. It’s entirely FCPS’ choice to act like the labor of women comes at no cost and anyone who isn’t a SAHM is a “hardship case” |
Hmmm Kay. You sound like my aap kid who doesn’t understand why he has to learn algebra. it isn’t just about passing a test sweetie.
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Capitalistic? That's how it is in communistic countries too. I actually went to school 6 days a week
I was responding to people saying teaching current curriculum doesn't require 5 days a week. To which I said how about we then aim at one that does require 5 days a week. Saying that we are wasting time anyways so why won't kids go to school less sounds really strange to me. |
What is the "students MUST have 5 days" based upon? A social norm? The fact YOU have to work 5 days a week? What makes 5 days a week for 180 total days, the "bare minimum"? What if the school year was initially designed to be 160 days and the standards and units made to reflect that? Would 180 days be over doing it? HS kids go to school 5 days a week, roughly 7.5 hours a day. Why couldn't they go 4 days for 9 hours? Why couldn't they go 6 days a week for 6 hours a day? Instead of 180 days a year, how about 210 days a year, but shorter days? Or 150 days a year, but longer days? Why does it HAVE to be 5 days? |
It doesn't need to be anything. We are just arguing that the level and quality of education isn't that great in FCPS. We could do better for the kids and we could teach to a higher level than a mediocre test. We could strive to provide kids with a consistent, predictable calendar. Aiming to meet the VA state minimum is a low bar in my opinion. Mediocrity shouldn't be the goal. |
So in other words, you want childcare. |
FCPS calls what they’re offering childcare. Parents are saying it could be enriching and beneficial time and not school days with no meaningful instruction followed by afternoons warehoused in the school in front of a Chromebook. |
You truly think these ideas would be privately funded, get real. The taxpayers are the ones who would end up footing the bill. You're better off paying for childcare. |
Don't forget all of these ideas/programs would have to be equitable across all schools... |
What they’ve been doing so far has not been, why would that need to change? |
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So in other words, you want childcare.
Stop it, PARENTS WORK!! So yes when a child is at school they are under the care of the school. So it is child care! If you are assuming a parents need for income is somehow below a child’s need to be in a safe and enriching period of time your are arguing about the wrong thing here. We are all two income households around here, and if you aren’t you are in the minority so STOP IT already! |
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Look. Both adults work in this household. It is school which is different than child care. That argument will lose every time so stop using it.
This is about consistency and momentum for learning! It is awful for the children trying to learn. |