Anonymous wrote:Unless the school is threatening to not let your child move up to the next grade, I don’t see the point of this. I recall growing up that students couldn’t miss more than 10% of school days, so if there are 180 school days, a student could miss 18 before dealing with administrative hassles (without getting into excused/unexcused, half-days for doctor appointments, tardies). It seems like most kids, barring unexpected medical issues, wouldn’t approach 18 absences in the normal course of a school year—a few sick days, a couple of vacation days, etc.
Anonymous wrote:The forced after school detention is real - every 3 hours after school earns them 1 day back. As a parent of an athlete with all A’s and multiple AP classes who is competing at national level competitions, I find it ridiculous that they are required to miss training to stay after school to make days up.
Anonymous wrote:Its ridiculous that kids are being pressured to "make up" attendance hours. How absurd. Excused absence means just that: excused.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please point me to policy in writing about these forced after school detentions? Is FCPS actually providing instruction during this time so that they can count it towards instructional hours?
This thread is the first I've ever heard of it. I am wondering if this is just MAGA rumor to bash FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS less time off at Christmas in the 1980s and we did not have a problem like this with attendance. People now feel entitled to their vacations even at the expense of school. But that is where we are now.
School felt entitled to their schedule of choice at the expense of parents. Why are parents supposed to treat schools with more respect than they recieve?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am kicking myself that we did not travel for the full week of Thanksgiving. There was no content taught and no assessments and so many kids were out that the school sent several emails begging parents to not call, but to send in absenses through SIS.
Parents, take your children out of school when you need do, especially before breaks. There is nothing going on the days leading up to Winter Break.
Of course families are leaving early.
This is ridiculous and wrong. I hope people don't listen to the likes of these idiots.
I’m a DP but…do you really think kids gain more sitting in front of a movie or on lexia unsupervised than being with family?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not racist. I had students of all races take off for two or three weeks in January. Yes, white children, too. The family was always on another continent. Always.
It’s discrimination, if you prefer that word. I want to take my kid out for just three extra days so they can spend a little more time with their grandparents. They’re elderly, and I genuinely don’t know how much longer my child will have the chance to be with them. We’re white, and the grandparents live overseas and cannot travel.
And now I’m being told that these three days of school—during a period when teachers are mostly focused on supporting underachievers—are somehow more important than my straight-A+ student spending irreplaceable time with aging grandparents?
Anonymous wrote:The forced after school detention is real - every 3 hours after school earns them 1 day back. As a parent of an athlete with all A’s and multiple AP classes who is competing at national level competitions, I find it ridiculous that they are required to miss training to stay after school to make days up.
Anonymous wrote:The forced after school detention is real - every 3 hours after school earns them 1 day back. As a parent of an athlete with all A’s and multiple AP classes who is competing at national level competitions, I find it ridiculous that they are required to miss training to stay after school to make days up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS less time off at Christmas in the 1980s and we did not have a problem like this with attendance. People now feel entitled to their vacations even at the expense of school. But that is where we are now.
School felt entitled to their schedule of choice at the expense of parents. Why are parents supposed to treat schools with more respect than they recieve?
But the school schedule provides more breaks. Why would parents need more?
Families with international jobs, families of immigrants, families of military/transient DC residence— all very well represented in the area— can’t fly to visit relatives in the 1 and 2 and .5 day breaks that are all over the calendar. Summer, spring, and winter breaks are expensive (which is why the teachers aren’t sticking around) and the principal correctly noticed a lot of people don’t want to spend thousands of extra dollars to have their kids watch a movie on Friday afternoon. FCPS should make it a planning day.
Not the school system's problem. You could argue there are way too many small breaks, but building a schedule to allow extended school year vacations is a recent and stupid entitlement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS less time off at Christmas in the 1980s and we did not have a problem like this with attendance. People now feel entitled to their vacations even at the expense of school. But that is where we are now.
School felt entitled to their schedule of choice at the expense of parents. Why are parents supposed to treat schools with more respect than they recieve?
But the school schedule provides more breaks. Why would parents need more?
Families with international jobs, families of immigrants, families of military/transient DC residence— all very well represented in the area— can’t fly to visit relatives in the 1 and 2 and .5 day breaks that are all over the calendar. Summer, spring, and winter breaks are expensive (which is why the teachers aren’t sticking around) and the principal correctly noticed a lot of people don’t want to spend thousands of extra dollars to have their kids watch a movie on Friday afternoon. FCPS should make it a planning day.