Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
This area will not adjust due to the large number of private schools. Many camp locations would only be operable during the 10 weeks of summer.
Yes it will adjust. Businesses always do.
They will not. The DMV shuts down the entire month of August due to the Fed government schedule. Private schools house and run many of the camps sought after by public school parents. You will not get private schools to move to a year round model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
This area will not adjust due to the large number of private schools. Many camp locations would only be operable during the 10 weeks of summer.
Yes it will adjust. Businesses always do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Year round school is still 180 days of school. You will still have 10 weeks of break, just not consecutively.
Arcola ES has 207 days of school. They're the only "innovative calendar" school now.
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/district/info/calendars/2024/calendar-2024-attachmentc.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
This area will not adjust due to the large number of private schools. Many camp locations would only be operable during the 10 weeks of summer.
Yes it will adjust. Businesses always do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the problem is different families have vastly different preferences. Wasn't there one ES with an innovative calendar where everyone disliked it so much they took the program away? And as others have mentioned they won't create more school days, just spread them out differently. So you'll have the same amount of money and the same need for child care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
This area will not adjust due to the large number of private schools. Many camp locations would only be operable during the 10 weeks of summer.
Anonymous wrote:Have you considered…teaching? I just had a great summer off with my baby and toddler. They are enrolled in 10 month care that coincides with the MCPS calendar. No tuition to pay over the summer and I sat on the beach the day my regular paycheck hit. If you’re really making so little that the summer is making you go broke you might seriously consider it. Year round school is a long time off if ever, so you’ll never benefit from it.
Anonymous wrote:Year round school is still 180 days of school. You will still have 10 weeks of break, just not consecutively.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.
Why do people use this as an excuse. Plenty of districts have year round or modified year round schedules. Do you think all their kids are suffering. There are still weeks off during the traditional summer just not as many. Camps, classes, kids adjust.
Anonymous wrote:How much longer are we going to have 10 weeks breaks in the summer? As an MCPS parent and employee, I am tired of going into debt to pay for camp, tired of my kids sitting home alone all day during the weeks they don’t have camp, and I’m tired of being broke come August every year from not making enough, not saving enough, and spending too much to try to entertain and enjoy the summer. Am I missing the point of the long summer break? I’d much rather have those 10 weeks spread out over the 12 months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would still be about 180 to 184 instructional days of school, so you'll be piecing together camps and other coverage, a week here, a week there.
Going to significantly more instructional days would take a truly epic budget increase.
And most camps are in the summer so you’d be very limited.
The camps would adjust to the school calendar. The current after school programs like Bar-T and Kidsco already have camp/daycare on days with school closures and over longer breaks. They would just shift when that is. OP wouldn’t save money, just shift the timetable.
There are more camps than those and it would be an issue with older kids who sleep away or speciality camps, work, etc.