Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was very disappointed they didn't ask about the MIDDLE SCHOOL AFTER SCHOOL program.
? The survey was designed to ask about middle school start times, which it didn’t even do that! After school programs have nothing to do with that.
Anonymous wrote:Yes that was a bad survey. (Survey methods professor here) The only question for elementary parents is just whether you think your current time is okay or not...waste of time, didn't collect meaningful information.
Anonymous wrote:I was very disappointed they didn't ask about the MIDDLE SCHOOL AFTER SCHOOL program.
Anonymous wrote:I just did and I have questions.
First of all, I never got an actual question about middle school start times. I have students in high school and elementary school and got a question about how I feel about their current start times and whether my high schooler had a job or needed to be home after school to babysit younger siblings and that's it.
So I don't get to weigh in on middle school start times because I have a kid who won't be there til next year??
Was this a glitch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same, I answered that I have kids in elementary school. One is in 6th grade, and based on the email indicating that 5th-6th grade students would be asked to take the survey in school, I assumed I would be able to as well. But I was routed to the same thank you message without being asked about actual start times.
Poorly designed survey. It should have said something like 'if you indicate that current elementary start times are OK, you will not receive any further questions'.
I said elementary school start times were too late and didn't get any further questions, so I don't think that's what limited the questions you saw.
Same. Our elementary doesn't start until 9:15, which makes it so working parents have to try to get SACC or other childcare both before and after school. My kids both got up way earlier when they were younger and want to sleep in now that they are hitting puberty. It would make so much more sense for the ES to have the earlier start time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same, I answered that I have kids in elementary school. One is in 6th grade, and based on the email indicating that 5th-6th grade students would be asked to take the survey in school, I assumed I would be able to as well. But I was routed to the same thank you message without being asked about actual start times.
Poorly designed survey. It should have said something like 'if you indicate that current elementary start times are OK, you will not receive any further questions'.
I said elementary school start times were too late and didn't get any further questions, so I don't think that's what limited the questions you saw.
Anonymous wrote:Same, I answered that I have kids in elementary school. One is in 6th grade, and based on the email indicating that 5th-6th grade students would be asked to take the survey in school, I assumed I would be able to as well. But I was routed to the same thank you message without being asked about actual start times.
Poorly designed survey. It should have said something like 'if you indicate that current elementary start times are OK, you will not receive any further questions'.