Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not buying that DCPS is closing school early to help close the achievement gap. The leadership knows that many families, high AND low SES, are struggling to homeschool, and that their teachers are also struggling. They're moving on to an on-line summer school program geared toward poor kids. They know that most UMC families in the system will find a way to provide adequate learning opportunities to their children until school starts up again.
Step outside of your experience. If 30% of families are logging I that means it is an equity issue. And 20% of the 30% is constantly b*tching. So- we’ll end & have an optional End of summer session. I’d love for them to only open sites in ward 7/8. Where everyone can attend if they choose. For the complainers and honestly mostly for the kids who are not able to log in. My guess is that very few will actually attend.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand this question.....what were you planning to do with the kids after June 19th in light of the pandemic? The answer is the same. Those three weeks aren't going to make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know, DCPS is looking pretty good after I read this article about Fairfax’s difficulties with distance learning. Their kids JUST started last week, four weeks after the schools were shut down!
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/fairfax-schools-online-learning-blackboard/2020/04/18/3db6b19c-80b5-11ea-9040-68981f488eed_story.html
I thought the same thing. I'm charter and my school is doing better than Fairfax. My friends with kids in DCPS report theirs are doing better too.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not buying that DCPS is closing school early to help close the achievement gap. The leadership knows that many families, high AND low SES, are struggling to homeschool, and that their teachers are also struggling. They're moving on to an on-line summer school program geared toward poor kids. They know that most UMC families in the system will find a way to provide adequate learning opportunities to their children until school starts up again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:41
Sounds like you’ve identified the things in your life that need to change. You set your a life totally dependent on 2 incomes & away from all family. Sounds like choices have consequences...
I am so glad you are so rich and smug!
On the contrary. We made tough choices to manage the needs of our family. Walked away from many things we felt entitled to, so we could accept 100% responsibility for our kids 100% of the time.
If we made more $$, we’d have more kids. If I’d stayed in a high demand job- we’d have fewer kids ect. If we lived closer to family, that would have played in too. And smug, no. Just tired of parents blaming their work/life balance on no one picking up more of the ‘life’.
So when it’s not a pandemic, you sit at home doing nothing....
Nope. Like I said earlier, I work. But I work a job that isn’t high paying or incredibly demanding. By choice. We had to move when our family made that choice. We gave up lots of things when I made that choice. We stopped having kids when I made that choice. We don’t panic every time the nurse calls from school, or the car pool is late, or after care closes.
The amount of stress parents put on outsourcing everything- so they can work more is astonishing.
I work too, because I CHOOSE too. We would be fine on my husbands I come alone but I like the challenge of my job, recognition and making my own money and being a role model. And I hate being trapped at home. Any parent who tells you this time with their is “special” or they are enjoying the extra snuggle time are lying. Only a brain dead person wants to spend 24/7 with their family.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, I think it’s terrible that middle class families have to find ways to supplement their kids all in the name of equity. It’s BS. DCPS should be able to meet the needs of all the kids they service. It’s unethical to penalize higher performing kids, because basically that is what they are doing.
But that basically has been their motto all along. Don’t meet the needs of the higher performing kids then the achievement gap won’t be as wide.........
Anonymous wrote:I'm not buying that DCPS is closing school early to help close the achievement gap. The leadership knows that many families, high AND low SES, are struggling to homeschool, and that their teachers are also struggling. They're moving on to an on-line summer school program geared toward poor kids. They know that most UMC families in the system will find a way to provide adequate learning opportunities to their children until school starts up again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:41
Sounds like you’ve identified the things in your life that need to change. You set your a life totally dependent on 2 incomes & away from all family. Sounds like choices have consequences...
I am so glad you are so rich and smug!
On the contrary. We made tough choices to manage the needs of our family. Walked away from many things we felt entitled to, so we could accept 100% responsibility for our kids 100% of the time.
If we made more $$, we’d have more kids. If I’d stayed in a high demand job- we’d have fewer kids ect. If we lived closer to family, that would have played in too. And smug, no. Just tired of parents blaming their work/life balance on no one picking up more of the ‘life’.
So when it’s not a pandemic, you sit at home doing nothing....
Nope. Like I said earlier, I work. But I work a job that isn’t high paying or incredibly demanding. By choice. We had to move when our family made that choice. We gave up lots of things when I made that choice. We stopped having kids when I made that choice. We don’t panic every time the nurse calls from school, or the car pool is late, or after care closes.
The amount of stress parents put on outsourcing everything- so they can work more is astonishing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:41
Sounds like you’ve identified the things in your life that need to change. You set your a life totally dependent on 2 incomes & away from all family. Sounds like choices have consequences...
I am so glad you are so rich and smug!
On the contrary. We made tough choices to manage the needs of our family. Walked away from many things we felt entitled to, so we could accept 100% responsibility for our kids 100% of the time.
If we made more $$, we’d have more kids. If I’d stayed in a high demand job- we’d have fewer kids ect. If we lived closer to family, that would have played in too. And smug, no. Just tired of parents blaming their work/life balance on no one picking up more of the ‘life’.
So when it’s not a pandemic, you sit at home doing nothing....
Nope. Like I said earlier, I work. But I work a job that isn’t high paying or incredibly demanding. By choice. We had to move when our family made that choice. We gave up lots of things when I made that choice. We stopped having kids when I made that choice. We don’t panic every time the nurse calls from school, or the car pool is late, or after care closes.
The amount of stress parents put on outsourcing everything- so they can work more is astonishing.
Your are a sanctimonious fact hunt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:41
Sounds like you’ve identified the things in your life that need to change. You set your a life totally dependent on 2 incomes & away from all family. Sounds like choices have consequences...
I am so glad you are so rich and smug!
On the contrary. We made tough choices to manage the needs of our family. Walked away from many things we felt entitled to, so we could accept 100% responsibility for our kids 100% of the time.
If we made more $$, we’d have more kids. If I’d stayed in a high demand job- we’d have fewer kids ect. If we lived closer to family, that would have played in too. And smug, no. Just tired of parents blaming their work/life balance on no one picking up more of the ‘life’.
So when it’s not a pandemic, you sit at home doing nothing....
Nope. Like I said earlier, I work. But I work a job that isn’t high paying or incredibly demanding. By choice. We had to move when our family made that choice. We gave up lots of things when I made that choice. We stopped having kids when I made that choice. We don’t panic every time the nurse calls from school, or the car pool is late, or after care closes.
The amount of stress parents put on outsourcing everything- so they can work more is astonishing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:41
Sounds like you’ve identified the things in your life that need to change. You set your a life totally dependent on 2 incomes & away from all family. Sounds like choices have consequences...
I am so glad you are so rich and smug!
On the contrary. We made tough choices to manage the needs of our family. Walked away from many things we felt entitled to, so we could accept 100% responsibility for our kids 100% of the time.
If we made more $$, we’d have more kids. If I’d stayed in a high demand job- we’d have fewer kids ect. If we lived closer to family, that would have played in too. And smug, no. Just tired of parents blaming their work/life balance on no one picking up more of the ‘life’.
So when it’s not a pandemic, you sit at home doing nothing....