Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private schools and Virginia public schools have started after labor day for years and seem to be quite successful. MD is now moving the entire state to this model as well. Please don't start DC schools weeks before labor day. Let kids enjoy their summer and don't make them feel that their schools are the pits so they have to be "punished" by starting earlier.
Some ways this could be achieved:
- Consolidate the many professional development days to the two weeks prior to Labor day.
- Require teaching during the last two-three weeks of school (rather than watching movies while teachers dismantle their classrooms, etc.)
- Start school 15 - 30 minutes earlier (8:45 is very late for elementary school drop off)
- Hold parent-teacher conferences in the late afternoon/early evening rather than closing the school for a day (much easier for parents too)
I know many people like the move to year-round school, but many also like the "old school" way that we all grew up with. It gives kids time over the summer to have fun and be kids. Really, we all lived through that system and I'd say that it worked out fine for most (nothing works best for everyone).
Unless you work and have to pay for child care/camp for all those days... This is a very SAHM perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Private schools and Virginia public schools have started after labor day for years and seem to be quite successful. MD is now moving the entire state to this model as well. Please don't start DC schools weeks before labor day. Let kids enjoy their summer and don't make them feel that their schools are the pits so they have to be "punished" by starting earlier.
Some ways this could be achieved:
- Consolidate the many professional development days to the two weeks prior to Labor day.
- Require teaching during the last two-three weeks of school (rather than watching movies while teachers dismantle their classrooms, etc.)
- Start school 15 - 30 minutes earlier (8:45 is very late for elementary school drop off)
- Hold parent-teacher conferences in the late afternoon/early evening rather than closing the school for a day (much easier for parents too)
I know many people like the move to year-round school, but many also like the "old school" way that we all grew up with. It gives kids time over the summer to have fun and be kids. Really, we all lived through that system and I'd say that it worked out fine for most (nothing works best for everyone).
Anonymous wrote:The "old way" was before schools were mandated to have 180 school days a year. The way Maryland is going to have to do this is by shortening a LOT of vacations and holidays.
Also, the whole point of professional development days is to help the teachers as they progress in their careers and throughout the school year. You cram it all at the beginning of the year and it's going to be useless.
Who's going to pay the teachers to work until 10 p.m. 4X per year for conferences?
There's before care if you need it. 8:45 is great for many of us who don't need our kids getting out of school too early and being stuck in after care for 4+ hours.