Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on teacher guy posting on AEM about 4 day school weeks? Methinks he's a little off his rocker.
He’s been off his rocker for years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
I doubt that program will ever end since a large number of Arlington students don’t know how to swim. Even junior high age kids.
This swimming competency initiative goes back some 50 plus years and has a ton of support, kind of like the planetarium which almost got the axe.
I'd love if they dropped the field trips to the pool and instead just offered APS kids in certain grades free access to public swim times at APS pools. It would cost APS very little, but would improve access and encourage kids to go routinely to actually learn to swim.
The problem is how to do that equitably for students from various backgrounds. Not all families have the time, resources, ore desire to go swimming on their own. Their kids will miss out.
But is swimming really a critical life skill that schools MUST teach? I say no. And yes I know a kid drowned 50 years ago, and that's the impetus for the program. But today, kids are dying of fentanyl overdoses. Let's reorder our priorities. You don't keep a program just because it's been around for 50 years.
Anonymous wrote:Kind of rich that the Arlington teacher now going after TJ and options programs was pushing pushing pushing for the virtual learning program for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is currently doing the swim program (this week). They are literally busing kids across the street from Claremont to Wakefield. Whatever that costs is a ridiculous expense, even if it is minimal. Of the 25 kids in their class, 5 seem to have limited swimming exposure. This week isn’t changing their skill. And the kids are otherwise missing a week of instructional time. My kid is having a blast but this ain’t it y’all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
I doubt that program will ever end since a large number of Arlington students don’t know how to swim. Even junior high age kids.
This swimming competency initiative goes back some 50 plus years and has a ton of support, kind of like the planetarium which almost got the axe.
I'd love if they dropped the field trips to the pool and instead just offered APS kids in certain grades free access to public swim times at APS pools. It would cost APS very little, but would improve access and encourage kids to go routinely to actually learn to swim.
The problem is how to do that equitably for students from various backgrounds. Not all families have the time, resources, ore desire to go swimming on their own. Their kids will miss out.
Doing it equitably is easy. All third graders have access for free. Send out information on swim times via the APS app several times during the year. Done.
You cant force kids to learn to swim. You can't force parents to introduce their kids to swimming. And the current field trips are disruptive and don't actually teach any kids to swim. It has to be up to kids and families. All you can do is improve access.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
I doubt that program will ever end since a large number of Arlington students don’t know how to swim. Even junior high age kids.
This swimming competency initiative goes back some 50 plus years and has a ton of support, kind of like the planetarium which almost got the axe.
I'd love if they dropped the field trips to the pool and instead just offered APS kids in certain grades free access to public swim times at APS pools. It would cost APS very little, but would improve access and encourage kids to go routinely to actually learn to swim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
I doubt that program will ever end since a large number of Arlington students don’t know how to swim. Even junior high age kids.
This swimming competency initiative goes back some 50 plus years and has a ton of support, kind of like the planetarium which almost got the axe.
I get the reasoning but no kid is learning to swim in the short time they’re in this program if they have no water experience. If I remember it was just a week when my kids did it.
The main purpose is to make sure kids have enough ability to not drown - tread water, jump off a diving board, stay afloat. We're not trying to train olympic medalists.
Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on teacher guy posting on AEM about 4 day school weeks? Methinks he's a little off his rocker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
I doubt that program will ever end since a large number of Arlington students don’t know how to swim. Even junior high age kids.
This swimming competency initiative goes back some 50 plus years and has a ton of support, kind of like the planetarium which almost got the axe.
I get the reasoning but no kid is learning to swim in the short time they’re in this program if they have no water experience. If I remember it was just a week when my kids did it.
Anonymous wrote:I suggest cutting every single one of the bus routes that duplicate public transit lines at the secondary school level. Metrobus and Art Buses are now free for students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we shut cut the APS aquatics program.
Doesn't this make money for APS?
I think they mean the 3rd and 8th grade units where they bus kids to the pool.
yes that's what I mean.
Anonymous wrote:Cutting the aquatics field trip will save almost no money. APS barely funds field trips. Mostly to planetarium, outdoor lab and pools. PTAs fundraise for Jamestown and the like.
Kids like pool week. No sense in cutting it. And APS is not going to fund something better.
Anonymous wrote:What I'd really like to stop are these "Friday Five" emails and texts etc. Just send group emails when there is truly something to report. We are busy people with jobs and kids. I don't have time to read something -- really multiple things -- from APS every single week. You guys know we already get communications from the actual schools our kids are in, right? [/quot
We don’t need a tv crew and we don’t need feel good PR BS. Just give us the actual information parents need and never seem to have.