Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yesss make Monday the professional day and Friday a regular day
There is a zero chance this will happen. Union would have to approve. Union would like both days off. And last day of marking period is Thursday so teachers ned Friday to finish grading.
Anonymous wrote:Yesss make Monday the professional day and Friday a regular day
Anonymous wrote:The timing of ES release, even with early dismissals is going to make this a really tough call.
Smartest move - Move Monday to the professional day and make Friday a normal day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe how uninformed and glib the parents are here. Look at what happened in the Midwest. This is a derecho. There will be no ability to get your kids after it passes because the streets will be closed. Obviously, schools must at least close early and the office doesn’t need parents randomly getting kids.
I really want it to swing completely around us. My school seems to be made out of papier mache and hope. We have damage from the end of January storm. In addition, the building is just falling apart. On one of the 80 deg days last week, I tried to open a classroom window and it came out of the frame on one side. Almost hit a student sitting nearby. I jammed my forefinger catching it. A derecho would probably destroy the entire second floor.
Anonymous wrote:The fact that some parents assume schools should just keep students late is wild. The logistics and trickling effect are significant on many- bus drivers, teachers, admin, paras, central office staff, etc. There are so many moving parts including making sure students have access to food, water, medication. We also have our own children to pick up from daycare and once again, some parents expect teachers to put their own lives at risk but would be the first to sue if their children come home with a scratch. We are a late elementary school and the last bus typically comes at 4:10. I will not stay late (unpaid to do so) and need to get home to my own family. Don’t care if it’s frowned upon but I have stayed late too many times and never got a single thank you. Just more and more demands even though I pour everything into this profession and helping other peoples kids. Love this job but the uninformed assumptions can be exhausting. The smartest and safest choice is to send everyone home early because the latest schools will have everyone home in time instead of dismissing in the thick of the storms. But hopefully it turns out to be an insignificant storm and can be a normal day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe how uninformed and glib the parents are here. Look at what happened in the Midwest. This is a derecho. There will be no ability to get your kids after it passes because the streets will be closed. Obviously, schools must at least close early and the office doesn’t need parents randomly getting kids.
I really want it to swing completely around us. My school seems to be made out of papier mache and hope. We have damage from the end of January storm. In addition, the building is just falling apart. On one of the 80 deg days last week, I tried to open a classroom window and it came out of the frame on one side. Almost hit a student sitting nearby. I jammed my forefinger catching it. A derecho would probably destroy the entire second floor.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe how uninformed and glib the parents are here. Look at what happened in the Midwest. This is a derecho. There will be no ability to get your kids after it passes because the streets will be closed. Obviously, schools must at least close early and the office doesn’t need parents randomly getting kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The safest place for kids during a tornado is at school, not walking home or riding a bus or even in their own home alone because their parents couldn’t get off work early.
Okay well they are predicting this between 3-6 pm so it sounds like there should be an early dismissal so kids arent ealking home or riding the vus during a possible tornado. Federal government also has precedent of early closures for weather conditions like this.
Matthew Cappucci posted that school systems should use Sunday to prepare plans for Monday. It is now considered a 4 out of 5 threat by the National Weather Service which is unusual for this area.
Anonymous wrote:The safest place for kids during a tornado is at school, not walking home or riding a bus or even in their own home alone because their parents couldn’t get off work early.