Anonymous wrote:Many require kids be older. My kids can’t work in animal shelters due to allergies. We don’t belong to a church that organizes activities. We commute a ways to a special needs school and have multiple kids, making weekday opportunities difficult.
My son is getting the hours in now that covid is over, he’s old enough for more activities and can drive, but he’ll be missing work for it. I can see it being challenging for many families.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of places won't allow volunteers under 18 without a parent chaperone for liability reasons. It's pretty restricted to umc families that have time to drive and chaperone.
I would be happy to see this requirement go away and incorporate service learning during the school day.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of places won't allow volunteers under 18 without a parent chaperone for liability reasons. It's pretty restricted to umc families that have time to drive and chaperone.
I would be happy to see this requirement go away and incorporate service learning during the school day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s also now required for middle schools. Kids need 15 hours. Ridiculous.
Really? I have an FCPS 7th grader and haven't heard anything about it.
Ask your child. It’s part of the 8th grade Civics class but they give you two years to complete. We also found info on the school
Website.
Anonymous wrote:It’s also now required for middle schools. Kids need 15 hours. Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s also now required for middle schools. Kids need 15 hours. Ridiculous.
Really? I have an FCPS 7th grader and haven't heard anything about it.
Ask your child. It’s part of the 8th grade Civics class but they give you two years to complete. We also found info on the school
Website.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's required for the IB diploma, if you are unlucky enough to be stuck in an IB school. It's pointless and a waste of everyone's time. Community service that is forced doesn't teach the kids anything. They don't even do a good job.
My DS is at an IB school and is doing the IB diploma. The school offers lots of opportunities for "community service" and I agree with another poster who said it's a joke, and I would not define what the kids are doing as community service: being on a panel and talking to freshmen and sophomores about the IB program; staffing their sports/club table during an activity fair during the school day or at an after school activity night; helping out in the concession stand during a sporting event (this one does involve some work.) I don't think my DS did one thing outside of school to satisfy the community service requirement. The only service that he did which might have taught him anything was the school's mulch sale: he spent hours loading and unloading large bags of mulch into vehicles and then dropping them off at homes. When he got home, he was filthy and exhausted and maybe grasped some appreciation for manual labor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s also now required for middle schools. Kids need 15 hours. Ridiculous.
Really? I have an FCPS 7th grader and haven't heard anything about it.
Anonymous wrote:It’s also now required for middle schools. Kids need 15 hours. Ridiculous.