Anonymous wrote:My DS didn’t have AC in his dorm at W&M. He lived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up going to Public school on DC. This is in the 80s. We had air-conditioning. Probably due to PTA raising money for the renovation. Lots of other schools had no central air-conditioning and maybe just some window units, if that. They got to close when it was really hot and I remember a bunch of us talking about how jealous we were because we wanted to be off too. Our teacher really started criticizing us for not realizing how lucky we were to have central air conditioning, and how going to school in air-conditioning was a privilege and we were lucky. She was right. I was only ten but that stuck with me.
Going to school in air conditioning should not be a privilege reserved only for some in the richest country on earth. I agree you were lucky but it's ridiculous it came down to luck.
Even more ridiculous that it still does.
Anonymous wrote:+1, it's absolutely ridiculous. I'm guessing both the Mayor's office and DCPS Central Office have both had A/C this week, and if they hadn't, they would have fixed it immediately and sent people home until it was done.
Anonymous wrote:There's evidence that classroom temperature influences one's ability to focus & learn. https://www.usnews.com/news/education-news/articles/2018-05-29/study-hotter-classrooms-make-it-harder-for-students-to-learn?context=amp
Anonymous wrote:My DS didn’t have AC in his dorm at W&M. He lived.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up going to Public school on DC. This is in the 80s. We had air-conditioning. Probably due to PTA raising money for the renovation. Lots of other schools had no central air-conditioning and maybe just some window units, if that. They got to close when it was really hot and I remember a bunch of us talking about how jealous we were because we wanted to be off too. Our teacher really started criticizing us for not realizing how lucky we were to have central air conditioning, and how going to school in air-conditioning was a privilege and we were lucky. She was right. I was only ten but that stuck with me.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in schools without AC and the last few weeks were agony and I remember the classes getting in trouble constantly for not paying attention. Did we survive? Of course. Did we learn anything? I really doubt it…