Anonymous wrote:As a former teacher, kids need consistency and five day weeks. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's so insane about the school year calendar? I think it's great that we're observing religious holidays beyond the Christian ones.
Do you have a job? If I have to explain this to you, you clearly do not have younger children and work full time.
Anonymous wrote:What's so insane about the school year calendar? I think it's great that we're observing religious holidays beyond the Christian ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's so insane about the school year calendar? I think it's great that we're observing religious holidays beyond the Christian ones.
Well, Christian holidays weren't recognized (until they added the Orthodox ones with all the others), so you're just wrong.
If you want religious holidays, go private.
Anonymous wrote:And when will the opportunity arise?
Anonymous wrote:What's so insane about the school year calendar? I think it's great that we're observing religious holidays beyond the Christian ones.
Anonymous wrote:I think the O days were a great compromise without having so few full weeks. Students need full 5 day weeks for routine and consistency. If more holidays need to be observed - put the teacher work days around them as well. As a teacher - I would rather have one long weekend that includes a work day and a religious holiday than 2 weeks of 4 day weeks. The one week difference is not a huge change in what is in my grade book and I can easily make changes after the bulk of the work is done for grading.
Anonymous wrote:What's so insane about the school year calendar? I think it's great that we're observing religious holidays beyond the Christian ones.