Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has been a perpetual problem and was when I was a kid as well. From the band director/school's point of view, band is a course with credits and grades and the marching band portion is part of the grade. You don't get credits for sports. But on the other hand, of course, kids who are talented at sports or just want to do a fall sport as well then have to make a decision. It's hard for the band program to decide whether it's ok to miss band practices for sports practices - it means keeping a kid who might be a dedicated band member the rest of the year, but then misses a large portion of the experience (and grading opportunities). But if you make exceptions for sports, it's a slippery slope and may have lots of kids who want to skip the marching band portion for myriad reasons. How do you decide which kids can skip and which can't?
This is why I encouraged my very athletic kid to play a string instrument. My less athletic kid is doing band.
I don't understand how after school/weekend forced participation (plus fundraising!) can be part of a grade. I can't see this requirement holding water if the issue is actually pushed.
Anonymous wrote:This has been a perpetual problem and was when I was a kid as well. From the band director/school's point of view, band is a course with credits and grades and the marching band portion is part of the grade. You don't get credits for sports. But on the other hand, of course, kids who are talented at sports or just want to do a fall sport as well then have to make a decision. It's hard for the band program to decide whether it's ok to miss band practices for sports practices - it means keeping a kid who might be a dedicated band member the rest of the year, but then misses a large portion of the experience (and grading opportunities). But if you make exceptions for sports, it's a slippery slope and may have lots of kids who want to skip the marching band portion for myriad reasons. How do you decide which kids can skip and which can't?
This is why I encouraged my very athletic kid to play a string instrument. My less athletic kid is doing band.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a requirement, I think, for any band at our HS.
Personally, coming from a HS that was small enough that if students didn't double up on activities, there would not be enough kids for sports/bands/debate/clubs/newspaper/etc, I think this is a stupid rule made to benefit band directors (who want the accolades for doing well in competitions) and not students.
There has been parent pushback, but not enough to change this policy.
Personally, coming from a smallish-but-seemingly-larger-than-yours, who did marching band through high school, this rule benefits the band and especially the band members, who are part of a group and build a strong and community.
Anonymous wrote:This is a requirement, I think, for any band at our HS.
Personally, coming from a HS that was small enough that if students didn't double up on activities, there would not be enough kids for sports/bands/debate/clubs/newspaper/etc, I think this is a stupid rule made to benefit band directors (who want the accolades for doing well in competitions) and not students.
There has been parent pushback, but not enough to change this policy.
Anonymous wrote:At Robinson, kids playing in concert 3 or above are required to participate in marching band. Is this the norm? My kid would rather do a fall club sport, but doing both would be impossible. It just doesn’t seem fair.