Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’d have to pay the teachers an extra day?
Yeah, but it would be worth it. Freshman would get a day to learn the building, test out their schedule, make friends from the other feeder schools, and engage in meaningful activities before the upperclassmen come back. I could especially see something like this being useful for 9th graders entering DCC high schools.
Even colleges do the same thing. Freshman generally move in a day or two before the upperclassmen do.
But why is it preferable to have them do all of those things without upperclassmen present? I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our MS, TPMS, they did a special orientation day for 6th graders. Well, it was more like 3-5 days where kids could sign up to walk through their classes and sit through some orientation.
SSIMS had something similar, on selected days over the summer.
Anonymous wrote:They do this in Anne Arundel County. The first day at a middle school will only have 6th graders, and the first day at a high school will only have 9th graders. The upper grades in the middle and high schools return the following day. This allows for the middle and high schools to engage in special activities with their 6th/9th graders, take them on tours of the building, informational rotations, team building activities etc, and gets the newbies acclimated to the school before the bigger kids come back the next day.
Anonymous wrote:At our MS, TPMS, they did a special orientation day for 6th graders. Well, it was more like 3-5 days where kids could sign up to walk through their classes and sit through some orientation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’d have to pay the teachers an extra day?
Yeah, but it would be worth it. Freshman would get a day to learn the building, test out their schedule, make friends from the other feeder schools, and engage in meaningful activities before the upperclassmen come back. I could especially see something like this being useful for 9th graders entering DCC high schools.
Even colleges do the same thing. Freshman generally move in a day or two before the upperclassmen do.
Anonymous wrote:They’d have to pay the teachers an extra day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about 9th grade, but pre-covid there was definitely a day for 6th graders to go to an "orientation" right before the first day of school.
They have those in AACPS too, but they still have the first day reserved for 6th and 9th graders. Sometimes the older kids come in as mentors and help on tours and mentor freshman in their homeroom classes throughout the year. It’s good for college applications.
So you want a second 6th/9th graders only first day? Why not three or four?
An orientation right before the first day of school isn’t the same thing as a 9th grader or 6th grader only first day. Orientations are brief and mostly informational. The 9th/6th grader only first day in AACPS is more like an actual day of school where the bells ring and you see all your teachers briefly (20 mins), get tours of the building, have icebreaker activities, get a feel of the school culture, and get a feel of how school will be. You don’t get that experience when you’re sitting in an auditorium next to your parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about 9th grade, but pre-covid there was definitely a day for 6th graders to go to an "orientation" right before the first day of school.
They have those in AACPS too, but they still have the first day reserved for 6th and 9th graders. Sometimes the older kids come in as mentors and help on tours and mentor freshman in their homeroom classes throughout the year. It’s good for college applications.
So you want a second 6th/9th graders only first day? Why not three or four?
An orientation right before the first day of school isn’t the same thing as a 9th grader or 6th grader only first day. Orientations are brief and mostly informational. The 9th/6th grader only first day in AACPS is more like an actual day of school where the bells ring and you see all your teachers briefly (20 mins), get tours of the building, have icebreaker activities, get a feel of the school culture, and get a feel of how school will be. You don’t get that experience when you’re sitting in an auditorium next to your parents.
Yes, that is what MCPS does for 6th graders and 9th graders on the Thursday before the first day of school. Without parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about 9th grade, but pre-covid there was definitely a day for 6th graders to go to an "orientation" right before the first day of school.
They have those in AACPS too, but they still have the first day reserved for 6th and 9th graders. Sometimes the older kids come in as mentors and help on tours and mentor freshman in their homeroom classes throughout the year. It’s good for college applications.
So you want a second 6th/9th graders only first day? Why not three or four?
An orientation right before the first day of school isn’t the same thing as a 9th grader or 6th grader only first day. Orientations are brief and mostly informational. The 9th/6th grader only first day in AACPS is more like an actual day of school where the bells ring and you see all your teachers briefly (20 mins), get tours of the building, have icebreaker activities, get a feel of the school culture, and get a feel of how school will be. You don’t get that experience when you’re sitting in an auditorium next to your parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about 9th grade, but pre-covid there was definitely a day for 6th graders to go to an "orientation" right before the first day of school.
They have those in AACPS too, but they still have the first day reserved for 6th and 9th graders. Sometimes the older kids come in as mentors and help on tours and mentor freshman in their homeroom classes throughout the year. It’s good for college applications.
So you want a second 6th/9th graders only first day? Why not three or four?
An orientation right before the first day of school isn’t the same thing as a 9th grader or 6th grader only first day. Orientations are brief and mostly informational. The 9th/6th grader only first day in AACPS is more like an actual day of school where the bells ring and you see all your teachers briefly (20 mins), get tours of the building, have icebreaker activities, get a feel of the school culture, and get a feel of how school will be. You don’t get that experience when you’re sitting in an auditorium next to your parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about 9th grade, but pre-covid there was definitely a day for 6th graders to go to an "orientation" right before the first day of school.
They have those in AACPS too, but they still have the first day reserved for 6th and 9th graders. Sometimes the older kids come in as mentors and help on tours and mentor freshman in their homeroom classes throughout the year. It’s good for college applications.
So you want a second 6th/9th graders only first day? Why not three or four?
An orientation right before the first day of school isn’t the same thing as a 9th grader or 6th grader only first day. Orientations are brief and mostly informational. The 9th/6th grader only first day in AACPS is more like an actual day of school where the bells ring and you see all your teachers briefly (20 mins), get tours of the building, have icebreaker activities, get a feel of the school culture, and get a feel of how school will be. You don’t get that experience when you’re sitting in an auditorium next to your parents.