Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is too big. Changing times is too hard and disruptive. Plus sports, how on earth could the kids practice? There's a reason our teams do better than the districts with late start times.
Oh dear! Let’s get all the kids up early because sports.
It's weird, isn't it?
Less than 5% students are in HS sports but MCPS schedule should be driven by that tiny wealthy minority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is too big. Changing times is too hard and disruptive. Plus sports, how on earth could the kids practice? There's a reason our teams do better than the districts with late start times.
Oh dear! Let’s get all the kids up early because sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course, there are pros and cons in every scenario. You need to get your priorities straight. If you are mostly concerned about teenage health, depression, etc you can make starting HS later a priority and work around that. If not, then no point to discuss.
+100000
BOE does not care even a bit about mental health of teens. It's a pointless discussion.
Anyone caring about teens mental heath would have flipped it long time back like some counties have done.
Mental health is not the BOE's problem. It's a parenting problem. I care about my child's mental health and they already have a full schedule and pushing start time back means they cannot do things they'd enjoy. Clearly you care more about your needs than other kids needs who may be different from yours. If your kids have mental health issues, get them therapist.
I am a mental health professional with kids in ES, lol.
Try to educate yourself a bit about how teens sleep cycles are different.
They’ll manage, just like millions of teenagers have done before them and millions will manage after them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is too big. Changing times is too hard and disruptive. Plus sports, how on earth could the kids practice? There's a reason our teams do better than the districts with late start times.
Oh dear! Let’s get all the kids up early because sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course, there are pros and cons in every scenario. You need to get your priorities straight. If you are mostly concerned about teenage health, depression, etc you can make starting HS later a priority and work around that. If not, then no point to discuss.
+100000
BOE does not care even a bit about mental health of teens. It's a pointless discussion.
Anyone caring about teens mental heath would have flipped it long time back like some counties have done.
Mental health is not the BOE's problem. It's a parenting problem. I care about my child's mental health and they already have a full schedule and pushing start time back means they cannot do things they'd enjoy. Clearly you care more about your needs than other kids needs who may be different from yours. If your kids have mental health issues, get them therapist.
I am a mental health professional with kids in ES, lol.
Try to educate yourself a bit about how teens sleep cycles are different.
I am educated in it as well. Maybe if you were a better mental health professional these kids wouldn't have these issues. It would be a disaster for my kid. Teens need to be prepared for the real world. Making a later start time will just have them go to bed later. My kid has sports at 3:45 for an hour an a half. So, by the time they do that and homework, eat, and some days another activity its easily 11 PM before everything is done, sometimes midnight. Pushing it back would make them go to bed an hour or two later or have to get up even earlier to do their schoolwork so the suggestion makes not sense except for maybe someone like you who doesn't value sports, work, extra curricular activities.