Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, we're closed on those days because large segments of the population celebrate them. Jewish schools have more time off around the major Jewish holidays than MCPS BTW.
Large segments of the population? Not where I live in Montgomery County. Where I live, a large segment of the population celebrates Muslim holidays.
Where do you live? Because 12K Muslims out of 971K county population is a very small percentage.
I live in Clarksburg.
Also, your numbers are out of date.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, we're closed on those days because large segments of the population celebrate them. Jewish schools have more time off around the major Jewish holidays than MCPS BTW.
Large segments of the population? Not where I live in Montgomery County. Where I live, a large segment of the population celebrates Muslim holidays.
Where do you live? Because 12K Muslims out of 971K county population is a very small percentage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It still says Christmas and Easter. Just doesn't say Yom Kippur or Rosh Hashanah.
That's just kind of offensive.
This change occurred during the debacle last year about religious holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It still says Christmas and Easter. Just doesn't say Yom Kippur or Rosh Hashanah.
That's just kind of offensive.
Anonymous wrote:It still says Christmas and Easter. Just doesn't say Yom Kippur or Rosh Hashanah.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, we're closed on those days because large segments of the population celebrate them. Jewish schools have more time off around the major Jewish holidays than MCPS BTW.
Large segments of the population? Not where I live in Montgomery County. Where I live, a large segment of the population celebrates Muslim holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The BOE has a stated policy of not closing on religious holidays. It doesn't matter when the holiday falls when there are so few celebrators in this county. If I lived in Dearborn, MI-where about 60% of the population celebrates the holiday-it would make sense. Here, no. This is BOE political correctness run amuk as usual.
Where does the BoE state this policy? If the BoE does have this policy, then it is clearly nonsense, given that MCPS is always closed for Christmas, per state law.
Do you read the paper ever? Just look at the school calendar. See any references to religious holiday closures? No, you don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The BOE has a stated policy of not closing on religious holidays. It doesn't matter when the holiday falls when there are so few celebrators in this county. If I lived in Dearborn, MI-where about 60% of the population celebrates the holiday-it would make sense. Here, no. This is BOE political correctness run amuk as usual.
Where does the BoE state this policy? If the BoE does have this policy, then it is clearly nonsense, given that MCPS is always closed for Christmas, per state law.
Do you read the paper ever? Just look at the school calendar. See any references to religious holiday closures? No, you don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The BOE has a stated policy of not closing on religious holidays. It doesn't matter when the holiday falls when there are so few celebrators in this county. If I lived in Dearborn, MI-where about 60% of the population celebrates the holiday-it would make sense. Here, no. This is BOE political correctness run amuk as usual.
Where does the BoE state this policy? If the BoE does have this policy, then it is clearly nonsense, given that MCPS is always closed for Christmas, per state law.
Anonymous wrote:
No, we're closed on those days because large segments of the population celebrate them. Jewish schools have more time off around the major Jewish holidays than MCPS BTW.
True. It could be the Sunday before.Anonymous wrote:Its not even certain that the holiday will actually fall on 9/12. So we have this totally messed up calendar for possibly no reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's amazing to me that closing for one group's religious holiday results in such a significant change to the calendar, particularly given that it appears the Muslim population in Montgomery County is only a bit over 1% of the total population.
I don't think that Eid al-Adha has any magic calendar-disrupting properties. Unless you think that, if the BoE had added a different day to the calendar that was not a Muslim holiday, all would have gone smoothly?
Taking another day off in September makes no sense, and it's being done specifically to cater to a tiny segment of the population. What part of that are you having difficulty understanding?
Of course it makes sense! That's when Eid al-Adha is in 2016. What wouldn't make sense is taking a day off in December or April for a holiday that's in September.
The BOE has a stated policy of not closing on religious holidays. It doesn't matter when the holiday falls when there are so few celebrators in this county. If I lived in Dearborn, MI-where about 60% of the population celebrates the holiday-it would make sense. Here, no. This is BOE political correctness run amuk as usual.
lol right. that's why we're closed on Rosh Hoshanah, Yom Kippur, Christmas, and Easter.
No, we're closed on those days because large segments of the population celebrate them. Jewish schools have more time off around the major Jewish holidays than MCPS BTW.