Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all you libs voting in these school board members and then complaining when they do stuff like this. This is what you morons voted for so shut up.
How do you know it’s the “libs” complaining?
I saw it first hand at one of our school meetings. The Harris voters were crying and complaining waving the calendar around while hyperventilating. Bunch of antisemites driving around with their peeling Harris stickers still on their cars.
Anonymous wrote:A bunch antisemitic people!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all you libs voting in these school board members and then complaining when they do stuff like this. This is what you morons voted for so shut up.
How do you know it’s the “libs” complaining?
Anonymous wrote:
Trust me. It’s not fringe noise. Part of it is that you don’t just do the job and get on with it. You act like being a teacher is the HARDEST job ever made. So of course people react like we do. It’s a hard job but so are a lot of jobs. You chose the job. Get on with it. Stop acting like you are basically the exact same as first responders or soldiers in combat. You are not. Get on with it and stop demanding we thank you for it.
I hear your frustration, and I agree that many jobs are difficult and deserve respect. But your message contains several assumptions that need unpacking.
First, no one is claiming that teaching is the “hardest job ever made” or that teachers are equivalent to soldiers or first responders. That’s a straw man argument—an exaggerated claim that no one actually made, used to dismiss the real concerns being raised. What many teachers do express is that the emotional, intellectual, and logistical demands of the profession are often misunderstood or minimized. That’s not self-aggrandizement—it’s advocacy.
Second, “You chose the job” is not a valid rebuttal to systemic challenges. Choosing a profession doesn’t mean forfeiting the right to speak about its realities. Nurses, firefighters, social workers, and yes, teachers—many of us choose roles that serve others. That choice doesn’t mean we should silently endure burnout, underfunding, or public disrespect.
Third, asking for recognition isn’t the same as demanding thanks. It’s about visibility. Teachers often absorb emotional labor, support students through trauma, adapt to shifting policies, and still show up with creativity and care. Acknowledging that isn’t performative—it’s honest.
So yes, we get on with it. But we also speak up. Because silence doesn’t serve students, and it doesn’t serve the profession.
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all you libs voting in these school board members and then complaining when they do stuff like this. This is what you morons voted for so shut up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of people here just can’t stand spending time with their kids. Sad.
Sad that you don't want your kids to get a top notch education!
Trust me. It’s not fringe noise. Part of it is that you don’t just do the job and get on with it. You act like being a teacher is the HARDEST job ever made. So of course people react like we do. It’s a hard job but so are a lot of jobs. You chose the job. Get on with it. Stop acting like you are basically the exact same as first responders or soldiers in combat. You are not. Get on with it and stop demanding we thank you for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, and again. Every single post on this forum turns into a teacher bashing post.
It’s what this site does best. Posters who haven’t been in the classroom since they were in high school themselves like to tell teachers how easy the job is.
I keep hoping the loudest voices bashing teachers are just a bitter few—people who, somewhere deep down, know they couldn’t do what teachers do. I want to believe that their cruelty is a mask for their own inadequacy
Trust me. It’s not fringe noise. Part of it is that you don’t just do the job and get on with it. You act like being a teacher is the HARDEST job ever made. So of course people react like we do. It’s a hard job but so are a lot of jobs. You chose the job. Get on with it. Stop acting like you are basically the exact same as first responders or soldiers in combat. You are not. Get on with it and stop demanding we thank you for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s what they should do- everyone gets 2 floating days to use for religious holidays that they can use without it being an absence. But keep school going!
This calendar is an embarrassment. I’m positive if parents voted or even all residents, this absolutely wouldn’t have been chosen. Why is there no week long fall break? Or a spring break separate from Easter?
Why are there no 5 day school weeks between now and November 10th???
Parents need to pressure the School Board to change this!
The school board needs to reign in the superintendent. These terrible calendars have been released by her office, through the 2027-2028 school year, without any input. There is no longer a calendar committee and she has clearly stated that she doesn't want one.
https://www.fcps.edu/calendars
The 26-27 and 27-28 calendars are significantly improved from the abomination this year IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of people here just can’t stand spending time with their kids. Sad.