Anonymous wrote:Just use the locker if it’s too much to carry. This is all nonsensical. You are overreacting. Block scheduling is a new phenomenon. Having a complete schedule all 5 days was the way for decades and decades prior. They can manage.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would this prevent you from pulling your kid on Mondays? They likely won’t have tests on these days. I’m more likely to make appointments on anchor days since they won’t have to take a backpack with both odd and even day supplies. The backpacks are so heavy as it is.
This doesn’t make sense to me at all. Anchor day would have all 7 classes so you would actually need both the odd and even day supplies all in one day.
Yes that’s my exact point. My 7th graders backpack ripped last year, it was so heavy. I’m not looking forward to her needing to carry both odd and even day supplies plus a laptop to school on the same day. I will purposely try to schedule appointments on anchor days to miss this day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just use the locker if it’s too much to carry. This is all nonsensical. You are overreacting. Block scheduling is a new phenomenon. Having a complete schedule all 5 days was the way for decades and decades prior. They can manage.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would this prevent you from pulling your kid on Mondays? They likely won’t have tests on these days. I’m more likely to make appointments on anchor days since they won’t have to take a backpack with both odd and even day supplies. The backpacks are so heavy as it is.
This doesn’t make sense to me at all. Anchor day would have all 7 classes so you would actually need both the odd and even day supplies all in one day.
Yes that’s my exact point. My 7th graders backpack ripped last year, it was so heavy. I’m not looking forward to her needing to carry both odd and even day supplies plus a laptop to school on the same day. I will purposely try to schedule appointments on anchor days to miss this day.
They didn’t use to have heavy laptops on top of binders though.
Anonymous wrote:Just use the locker if it’s too much to carry. This is all nonsensical. You are overreacting. Block scheduling is a new phenomenon. Having a complete schedule all 5 days was the way for decades and decades prior. They can manage.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would this prevent you from pulling your kid on Mondays? They likely won’t have tests on these days. I’m more likely to make appointments on anchor days since they won’t have to take a backpack with both odd and even day supplies. The backpacks are so heavy as it is.
This doesn’t make sense to me at all. Anchor day would have all 7 classes so you would actually need both the odd and even day supplies all in one day.
Yes that’s my exact point. My 7th graders backpack ripped last year, it was so heavy. I’m not looking forward to her needing to carry both odd and even day supplies plus a laptop to school on the same day. I will purposely try to schedule appointments on anchor days to miss this day.
Just use the locker if it’s too much to carry. This is all nonsensical. You are overreacting. Block scheduling is a new phenomenon. Having a complete schedule all 5 days was the way for decades and decades prior. They can manage.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would this prevent you from pulling your kid on Mondays? They likely won’t have tests on these days. I’m more likely to make appointments on anchor days since they won’t have to take a backpack with both odd and even day supplies. The backpacks are so heavy as it is.
This doesn’t make sense to me at all. Anchor day would have all 7 classes so you would actually need both the odd and even day supplies all in one day.
Yes that’s my exact point. My 7th graders backpack ripped last year, it was so heavy. I’m not looking forward to her needing to carry both odd and even day supplies plus a laptop to school on the same day. I will purposely try to schedule appointments on anchor days to miss this day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would this prevent you from pulling your kid on Mondays? They likely won’t have tests on these days. I’m more likely to make appointments on anchor days since they won’t have to take a backpack with both odd and even day supplies. The backpacks are so heavy as it is.
This doesn’t make sense to me at all. Anchor day would have all 7 classes so you would actually need both the odd and even day supplies all in one day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anchor days used to be the norm. Having every class, every day used to be the norm. Block scheduling is the new approach.
Yup, MS had each class every day before the pandemic. They went to block for MS during virtual school and never went back. It’s a very bad model for MS kids. That long of a class doesn’t work and skipping each class every other day makes it hard for many to keep track of things.
What planet are you on? The MS was using block scheduling way before the pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:So much of a 90 minute class is wasted time. You can't absorb 90 minutes of a math lesson at once, for example. Much easier for teachers and students to learn one concept, go home and practice it, and return the next day for another concept. Teachers know this - that's why my kids report the last 30 minutes of many classes is devoted to chatting with friends, watching movies on school issued laptop etc. Utter waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anchor days used to be the norm. Having every class, every day used to be the norm. Block scheduling is the new approach.
Yup, MS had each class every day before the pandemic. They went to block for MS during virtual school and never went back. It’s a very bad model for MS kids. That long of a class doesn’t work and skipping each class every other day makes it hard for many to keep track of things.
What planet are you on? The MS was using block scheduling way before the pandemic.