Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no point in having school after students take the SOL. If you pass the SOL your Summer should start. If you fail, four more weeks of school and retake the test. Schools could save money by only retaining the teacher they need to teach the retake students. Everyone else, loses pay for working fewer days but gets a longer Summer break.
As a teacher I love that idea
That could be a loss of more than a month of pay depending on your subject and test date.
Anonymous wrote:You're absolutely right, we should reduce winter break by one week and have a shorter spring break, children do not need "good friday" or whatever it's called off, nobody even knows what that is. So dumb to have holidays related to religions. Especially when in 50 years that religion won't even be the majority in this country anymore, thank goodness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no point in having school after students take the SOL. If you pass the SOL your Summer should start. If you fail, four more weeks of school and retake the test. Schools could save money by only retaining the teacher they need to teach the retake students. Everyone else, loses pay for working fewer days but gets a longer Summer break.
As a teacher I love that idea
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's hilarious how every June people can't wait for the year to end but in this thread most responses support endless year round school!
The normal people (anti-year round schoolers) need to make sure next school year ends no later than June 10, 2026 at the worst better yet June 5, 2026. FCCPS is August 18-June 5afterall so it's certainly possible but starting so early and still going so deep in June is unacceptable!
It isn't endless year round school. We get 180 school days -- I would just prefer them to be spread out on the 9 week on, 2 week off schedule with 2 days off over Labor Day, 3 days off at Thanksgiving, and a 7 week summer. I'm a HS teacher, and I'm realistic about this schedule never being approved. But one can dream...
Anonymous wrote:There is no point in having school after students take the SOL. If you pass the SOL your Summer should start. If you fail, four more weeks of school and retake the test. Schools could save money by only retaining the teacher they need to teach the retake students. Everyone else, loses pay for working fewer days but gets a longer Summer break.
Anonymous wrote:It's hilarious how every June people can't wait for the year to end but in this thread most responses support endless year round school!
The normal people (anti-year round schoolers) need to make sure next school year ends no later than June 10, 2026 at the worst better yet June 5, 2026. FCCPS is August 18-June 5afterall so it's certainly possible but starting so early and still going so deep in June is unacceptable!
Anonymous wrote:There is no point in having school after students take the SOL. If you pass the SOL your Summer should start. If you fail, four more weeks of school and retake the test. Schools could save money by only retaining the teacher they need to teach the retake students. Everyone else, loses pay for working fewer days but gets a longer Summer break.
Anonymous wrote:I prefer 6-8 week summer break and two week breaks between each quarter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer the longer school year.
FCPS teacher here. I prefer the longer school year as well. We don't need more weeks off in the summer. (Actually, I'd really prefer a year round schedule with 9 weeks on and 3 weeks off.)
You’re in the minority.
I don’t know, this came up in our high school work room today—we all agreed it would be nice to have 9 weeks on, 3 weeks off, with a work day at the end of each quarter for grades and the few other major holidays that would have attendance impacts (thanksgiving). Summer could be 4 or 5 weeks—that’s enough.
The only voice of dissent was from someone who just inherited a beach house and is excited to spend long summers in it going forward, lol
How would kids take "summer classes" either to catch up or get ahead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer the longer school year.
FCPS teacher here. I prefer the longer school year as well. We don't need more weeks off in the summer. (Actually, I'd really prefer a year round schedule with 9 weeks on and 3 weeks off.)
You’re in the minority.
I don’t know, this came up in our high school work room today—we all agreed it would be nice to have 9 weeks on, 3 weeks off, with a work day at the end of each quarter for grades and the few other major holidays that would have attendance impacts (thanksgiving). Summer could be 4 or 5 weeks—that’s enough.
The only voice of dissent was from someone who just inherited a beach house and is excited to spend long summers in it going forward, lol
How would kids take "summer classes" either to catch up or get ahead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the 2025-2026 calendar will be changed.
They are not going to shorten the school year. They would need to remove either the federal holidays or the new religious days or shorten the Winter Break and I don't see them doing any of that. The only one I potentially see them doing is removing the federal holidays. Losing the new religious holidays will cause a stink with the various religions and shortening winter break will piss off the people who take a month at that time of year to travel to Asia/SE Asia visit family and the parents who want two weeks in Europe or skiing.
If religious holiday must be kept as days off for all students, then schedule Teacher work days (professional development or planning days) on religious holidays and allow specific teachers to take off religious holiday on Teacher workdays if relevant to their religion.
-Teacher
Teacher here. I agree.