Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the breaks, it helps my HS stay on top of their studies and be able to have enough down time.
+1
I think it’s fine for high school, but for working parents with younger kids the inconsistent schedule is really hard.
School isn’t daycare, dumbass
This is the worst response. It's the same number of school days, genius.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the breaks, it helps my HS stay on top of their studies and be able to have enough down time.
+1
I think it’s fine for high school, but for working parents with younger kids the inconsistent schedule is really hard.
School isn’t daycare, dumbass
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've had 3 (4?) religious holidays so far this year... and endless more to come.
Liberals fought hard to remove any entanglement between public school and Christian religion, now these hypocrites can't add enough religious holidays to the schedule.
Wish my kids were in school and learning. Wish the School Board even cared about that.
Maybe you should send your kid to private. Homeschooling is also an option.
Maybe Public Schools should have a sensible schedule. I don't think that we have a month left this year were the kids have a full week of school every week. We have a few were there is only one short week but most have 2-3 weeks that are off or shortened. Say what you will about diversity but many kids need a more stable schedule.
Between Teacher Workdays and Religious holidays and Federal Holidays the kids are out of school in a way that is disruptive. Something needs to change. And yes, I filled out the survey. And I have looked at the survey results and it sure as hell looks to me like most parents are not happy with the schedule.
Actually, the first 3 weeks in December are full weeks.
And then time off so not a full month of school. The Winter Holiday is normal but the disruptions in September and October are new. January and February are traditionally a mess because it is near impossible to get back into a routine due to the various Federal Holidays and then snow days. Now we are extending that with extra days off in April.
The fall used to be reasonably stable but no more.
A complete mess.
My kid is fine but he doesn't have any issues and is chill and goes with the flow well. My friends kid with anxiety and ADHD is having issues with refusal this year because of all the disruptions. I can only imagine the trouble that kids with executive functioning issues are having because there are consistent changes to schedules.
It is unnecessary. Make these days O days where there are no tests or homework or assignments due. Let people who want to miss, miss without punishment, but stop disrupting the routines that are needed for lots of kids.
And if your high school kid needs the extra time to do the work and is stressed about the work load, revisit your kids workload.
Of course you assume that the 2 week "Winter Holiday is normal" because it is the one that works for you. O days were a mess last year, which is why they aren't doing them again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pull the plug on stupid religious holidays, end sooner in June, start after Labor Day.
This includes Christian holidays right? School on Christmas, hooray!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the breaks, it helps my HS stay on top of their studies and be able to have enough down time.
+1
I think it’s fine for high school, but for working parents with younger kids the inconsistent schedule is really hard.
It's not "inconsistent" if it's on a set schedule far in advance, which these days off are.
There is time to plan. I'm not saying it's easy or ideal, I get that it isn't. But calling it "inconsistent", as if schools just airily declare on a whim on Wednesday that the next Monday is a day off, whenever, is incorrect.
It’s inconsistent for my kid because that day of sitting around (I work outside the home) gets him in a funk. He would rather be in school.
You could have easily given him things to work on (reading, extra homework prep, chores, raking leaves, volunteering in the neighbor hood, etc.) if he did nothing that I’d definitely on you.
DP, but how old are your kids, where they can do these things independently and this parent can work without interruptions? Good luck finding volunteer opportunities without a parent. If anyone has a magic way to get kids to rake leaves for hours and actually do it, please let me know. Money doesn’t work. Any of these activities can occupy them for a little while but it’s constant start and stop all day for a parent trying to work.
No one said "rake leaves for hours," and you don't need "magic" to get your kids to do what you tell them to do. Have you tried -- oh, I don't know -- parenting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've had 3 (4?) religious holidays so far this year... and endless more to come.
Liberals fought hard to remove any entanglement between public school and Christian religion, now these hypocrites can't add enough religious holidays to the schedule.
Wish my kids were in school and learning. Wish the School Board even cared about that.
Do you complain about getting off for Christmas???????????????
DP here. Christmas happens to be a Federal holiday and is a day off for almost every organization and business. It also falls during the Winter Break which is not necessarily affiliated with a religion (although of course it encompasses several religious holidays).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've had 3 (4?) religious holidays so far this year... and endless more to come.
Liberals fought hard to remove any entanglement between public school and Christian religion, now these hypocrites can't add enough religious holidays to the schedule.
Wish my kids were in school and learning. Wish the School Board even cared about that.
Do you complain about getting off for Christmas???????????????
Anonymous wrote:So only Christian holidays are ok for OP?
Your post "might" have had some credibility if you didn't throw that in there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me translate for OP:
"ugh, I hate having to take care of my own kids, wish I could go to Monday Barre class"
Yeah, if only it were that simple. I’d love to be going to barre class instead of paying private tutors to get my kids somewhat caught up after the scamdemic school closures, woke ideology run amock and now more holidays and days off. I think everyone and their beliefs should be celebrated but weve truly lost sight of the bigger picture here.
"Scamdemic?" Oh, you're dumb. Your poor kids.
More kids are out sick with the flu then with COVID , I never thought so but now I'd say yes
https://www.nbc29.com/2022/10/24/rsv-local-schools/?outputType=amp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me translate for OP:
"ugh, I hate having to take care of my own kids, wish I could go to Monday Barre class"
Yeah, if only it were that simple. I’d love to be going to barre class instead of paying private tutors to get my kids somewhat caught up after the scamdemic school closures, woke ideology run amock and now more holidays and days off. I think everyone and their beliefs should be celebrated but weve truly lost sight of the bigger picture here.
"Scamdemic?" Oh, you're dumb. Your poor kids.
More kids are out sick with the flu then with COVID , I never thought so but now I'd say yes
https://www.nbc29.com/2022/10/24/rsv-local-schools/?outputType=amp
Anonymous wrote:Get over yourself, OP. There’s still plenty of school days in the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me translate for OP:
"ugh, I hate having to take care of my own kids, wish I could go to Monday Barre class"
Yeah, if only it were that simple. I’d love to be going to barre class instead of paying private tutors to get my kids somewhat caught up after the scamdemic school closures, woke ideology run amock and now more holidays and days off. I think everyone and their beliefs should be celebrated but weve truly lost sight of the bigger picture here.
"Scamdemic?" Oh, you're dumb. Your poor kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a longer year, though. As a teacher, I would prefer less days off during the year and a longer summer. These days off here and there help to catch up on sleep, but I can’t clear my head. I am always thinking about teaching.
I am also a teacher, but I have the opposite opinion. I support what research shows, that shorter and more frequent breaks are better for learning, and for preventing learning loss, than long summer breaks are.
I'm not sure how you can ever clear your head. Even with long summers, I am always thinking about teaching. In fact, I spend most of the summer each year catching up on professional reading and planning that I did not have time for during the school year.
You spend nearly 10 weeks on “professional reading”? Doubt that. What exactly are you reading - FCPS doesn’t assign anything or have one standardized book. I’m sure you have vacations. Sick of the exaggerations of how teachers spend all summer reading and planning. They don’t.
-former FCPS teacher
Anonymous wrote:We've had 3 (4?) religious holidays so far this year... and endless more to come.
Liberals fought hard to remove any entanglement between public school and Christian religion, now these hypocrites can't add enough religious holidays to the schedule.
Wish my kids were in school and learning. Wish the School Board even cared about that.