Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets an hour recess at his charter and one hour of specials (art, PE, cooking/gardening or music) every day.
Which charter, if you don't mind my asking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no way 15 minute recess is what they intend-- I don't think that's even allowed. I would think it's maybe a staffing or scheduling issue, or poor classroom control. The school isn't going to admit to that, of coursebecause they won't want to admit they're breaking city guidance or not in the right ratio or not compiant with someone's IEP or whatever the real reason may be. But you can ask the teacher about it, then escalate to the AP if it doesn't improve. That way they'll know parents are watching.
I think that some amount of recess is mandated, so if they're not doing that, it's a problem.
Anonymous wrote:There's no way 15 minute recess is what they intend-- I don't think that's even allowed. I would think it's maybe a staffing or scheduling issue, or poor classroom control. The school isn't going to admit to that, of coursebecause they won't want to admit they're breaking city guidance or not in the right ratio or not compiant with someone's IEP or whatever the real reason may be. But you can ask the teacher about it, then escalate to the AP if it doesn't improve. That way they'll know parents are watching.
because they won't want to admit they're breaking city guidance or not in the right ratio or not compiant with someone's IEP or whatever the real reason may be. But you can ask the teacher about it, then escalate to the AP if it doesn't improve. That way they'll know parents are watching.Anonymous wrote:They should not be doing just 15 minutes, something is not right here. I'd try lurking outside the school to see![]()
There are mandated time periods for each subject, so the whole day is built around getting the right amounts of that. The specials teachers see each class in turn, they can't stay late with one group without shortchanging the next.
If the class seems rushed or behind schedule it might be that the teacher isn't managing routines and behavior well so they keep getting delayed. Or there's some other scheduling issue like specials teachers running late, or not enough time planned for transitioning. It can take a long time for a class of 1st graders to get their jackets on and walk to the playground, an experienced school administration will plan accordingly but an inexperienced one might not allow enough time and that throws the whole schedule out of whack. A school's schedule is a real puzzle-- it has to work for all grades, all IEPs, all specials, to share a limited staff and a limited physical space in a limited amount of time.
It seems like you might still in an ECE mode of thinking about things. In 1st it's time to grow up a little bit, do work that feels like work, learn to manage time, etc. Not that there shouldn't also be joy and fun, but it's a different kind of thing than K, especially in the public system. Parents sometimes want their kids to have tons of playtime, no pressure, lots of music and art, gardening, etc etc, but they also want solid academic performance in upper elementary. And the foundation for that is solid academics in lower elementary. Only the most skillful teachers at the best-organized school can deliver on both. That's why you see parents praise their cozy, crunchy charter ECE program, then be really dissatisfied in upper elementary, then head to BASIS.
Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets an hour recess at his charter and one hour of specials (art, PE, cooking/gardening or music) every day.
Anonymous wrote:I think recess is 30 minutes, although the littlest kids might get additional time. They don't cut recess short, and it's only indoors if the weather is bad. They don't do the no-talking at lunch thing, but I've heard of other schools doing this, and it is probably because the kids get so busy talking that they don't eat and then they are hungry (or hangry) in the afternoon.
I don't know what you mean by "how full is the schedule." It's full. They have blocks scheduled all day for reading, math, PE, art, music, circle time, etc. As a practical matter, most teachers include regular movement breaks throughout the day, and the kids move among different stations (for the little kids) or classrooms (the older kids).
Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets an hour recess at his charter and one hour of specials (art, PE, cooking/gardening or music) every day.
Anonymous wrote:A 15 minute recess does seem very short, but other than that what you describe seems normal. There is a lot of pressure in public schools to hit specific content requirements and lots more testing. It isn't fun, but I would aslo be shocked if your kid didn't have a ton of movement breaks, fun activities etc.
Can you ask to read to the class or volunteer in some way so you can see what's actually going on? I used to get the same reports from my kids, but when I went in and actually saw how much fun they had, how much silliness and dancing went on, etc., I was relieved.