This is the issue all these PD days and no half days DRAG the year on. Reduce the PD days and either return 4 half days or cut two days from the requirement if people are too insane to handle half days.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably more contractually required professional development days for teachers. Around 2016 they also got rid of half days in favor of full days so that turned 8 half days of school into four full days off.
Yup. This is the explanation.
Do they really start college by MID-August?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren't they all 180 days?
It's not the number of school days but TOTAL days from the first to last day of school. Some more non-school days must been added that makes the length of the school year longer. School should be out by June 19 (I'd say June 21 but since schools are now off annually for Juneteenth might as well start summer then) and should not start earlier than the final week of August. It's TOO hot! If anything the camps need to be a week longer! The first week of August being the last week of camp is absurd!
It's a labor issue. College kids and foreign students head back to their campuses or home countries in August. Getting kids into summer camp the last three weeks of August around DC is actually really difficult - there's not a lot of availability. For example, the pricey HeadFirst camps loose staff and get booted from their private school campuses (St. Albans/NCS, St Pat's) by the end of 1st week of August.
DCPS is going to start school a week earlier beginning in 2028: https://dcps.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dcps/page_content/attachments/SY%2026-29%20Calendars_FINAL_English_042825.pdf
Awful, no need to begin on August 21 (which is August 14 for teachers and August NINTH for new teachers)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren't they all 180 days?
It's not the number of school days but TOTAL days from the first to last day of school. Some more non-school days must been added that makes the length of the school year longer. School should be out by June 19 (I'd say June 21 but since schools are now off annually for Juneteenth might as well start summer then) and should not start earlier than the final week of August. It's TOO hot! If anything the camps need to be a week longer! The first week of August being the last week of camp is absurd!
It's a labor issue. College kids and foreign students head back to their campuses or home countries in August. Getting kids into summer camp the last three weeks of August around DC is actually really difficult - there's not a lot of availability. For example, the pricey HeadFirst camps loose staff and get booted from their private school campuses (St. Albans/NCS, St Pat's) by the end of 1st week of August.
DCPS is going to start school a week earlier beginning in 2028: https://dcps.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dcps/page_content/attachments/SY%2026-29%20Calendars_FINAL_English_042825.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Aren't they all 180 days?
Anonymous wrote:One contributor is there used to be a half day at the end of each term that counted toward the 180 days. This 1/2 day is contract mandated for teachers to do their end of term report cards/grading. These were turned into full days off for kids (1/2 day records and 1/2 day teacher PD).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren't they all 180 days?
It's not the number of school days but TOTAL days from the first to last day of school. Some more non-school days must been added that makes the length of the school year longer. School should be out by June 19 (I'd say June 21 but since schools are now off annually for Juneteenth might as well start summer then) and should not start earlier than the final week of August. It's TOO hot! If anything the camps need to be a week longer! The first week of August being the last week of camp is absurd!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably more contractually required professional development days for teachers. Around 2016 they also got rid of half days in favor of full days so that turned 8 half days of school into four full days off.
Yup. This is the explanation.
Anonymous wrote:Probably more contractually required professional development days for teachers. Around 2016 they also got rid of half days in favor of full days so that turned 8 half days of school into four full days off.
Anonymous wrote:Aren't they all 180 days?