Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if we ended the school year two weeks earlier, the teachers would just stop teaching two weeks before that. It would be a vicious cycle.
I don’t think so. I think it’s LATE. It’s WARM. We are DONE.
Nah. My friends in other states where school ends in late May felt the same way in mid May. They were "DONE" too. Its mental, it doesn't have anything to do with the numeric date on the calendar. College students feel "DONE" in mid April.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if we ended the school year two weeks earlier, the teachers would just stop teaching two weeks before that. It would be a vicious cycle.
I don’t think so. I think it’s LATE. It’s WARM. We are DONE.
Anonymous wrote:But if we ended the school year two weeks earlier, the teachers would just stop teaching two weeks before that. It would be a vicious cycle.
Anonymous wrote:It's because there aren't enough large vacations in the school year that you feel burn-out.
In my home country of France, the summer vacation is shorter (one month and a half), but there are two-week breaks in mid-fall, around Christmas, mid-winter, and around but not necessarily at Easter. Two weeks is great, because it allows for a real re-charge. People can travel if they want, even to far-away places, and not have to worry about cramming it all in and jet lag. There is a system of subsidized childcare for parents who work.
So it's not year-round school, but the calendar is more evenly broken up.
Anonymous wrote:This thread proves you just can’t make parents happy. Another thread complained about teachers showing movies the last couple weeks of school. Some want a shorter school, others want year-round