I'm not so sure I would go so far as to say they care. I don't have a child there, but I watched one of the teachers testify at the school board meeting last year supporting the redistricting. She seemed to be acting like it was hard to do..but if she cared about those kids in her class at all, she would have fought for them, not against them. A teacher had no place taking sides in a situation like that. |
It's a good school, but does not actually feel any smaller this year. It's only about 60 kids smaller, if that. |
If school personnel believe that it's in the best interests of students to be assigned to schools that aren't seriously overcrowded (or, to use the prior poster's phrase, "bursting at the seams"), they have the right to express their opinion in a public forum. Your suggestion that she was "taking sides" against students presumably was not how she viewed her comments at all. I expect that one reason why the Haycock teachers recently expressed such satisfaction with working at the school is that they perceive their voices matter and are heard. If the message to teachers was just "put up and shut up," they would be an unhappier bunch, and then you or some other poster would be making a big deal out of that instead. |
Is the principal back from maternity leave yet? |
She was on maternity leave again??? |
Some reading material for you: http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/fs-preg.html |
Oh come on! I was impacted by the redistricting last year and lost respect for the principal then, but even I respect her right to have as many children as she wants and to take maternity leave. Let's be civil human beings. |
Holt crap, we have officially gone crazy. I guess we can only hire male principals because God forbid a female principal chooses to build a family, she is raked over the coals. Real classy. |
| the Haycock's principal was/is/has been so noticeably biased to her personally favorite students, you have to wonder where or how she could get so much power in a public school and no one dares to complain about it? if you could afford Churchill ES, dont go to Haycock! |
Haycock was fortunate to have had a retired principal who had previously been the principal at Timber Lane and Wolftrap fill in during the principal's maternity leave. Dr. Blain did a great job and Dr. Shears came back in late April. The contract to renovate Haycock is scheduled to be awarded this week. So, yes, if you don't want to put up with construction for a couple of years, you should look at Churchill Road or another school - there are plenty of good ones in NoVa. |
Yeah, I know. It's so crowded, no one wants to go there anymore.
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This is a serious charge and, in my experience, false. I wish you backed up your statements with facts. Or that you weren't anonymous. |
You guys are really touchy. Pp was surprised that the principal was on maternity leave, but I'm not so sure she was arguing against a woman's right to maternity leave. |
Not either of the two posters to whom you're responding, but I think you're being rather charitable. The post came across as disrespectful of both the specific individual and the general principle of maternity leave. |
| In pp's defense. This was the third maternity leave in 4 years. It is a lot of time away, but I assume it happens at some point in the career do most female principals. It's definitely not a crisis, and a woman has a right to have children in whatever time frame and spacing she prefers. |