Anonymous wrote:The state resolution actually says that they shouldn't have any of their makeup days after the scheduled last day of school. So MCPS proposing moving the first day of school earlier so they can move the scheduled last day of school to June 11th and have space for makeup days afterwards is actually not in compliance with what MSDE is asking for.
"BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Maryland State Board of Education hereby charges the State Superintendent of Schools to develop and issue guidance for LEAs for the 2026–2027 school year addressing best practices in calendar design, including the placement and communication of inclement weather and natural/civil disaster make-up days and an emphasis that inclement weather and natural/civil disaster make-up days not be identified after the last day of school established in the adopted calendar"
Anonymous wrote:This is what MSDE passed: https://marylandpublicschools.org/stateboard/documents/2026/0324/resolution-26-01-on-school-calendar-planning-and-inclement-weather-make-up-days-a.pdf
Doesn't it just say that it encourages districts to make changes, and if they don't then MSDE won't give them a waiver if there's lots of snow days?
Also, doesn't it say that (in order to qualify for the waiver next year) MSDE is only asking for 6 makeup days if the school district has no virtual instruction plan, but if they do have one they only need 3?
Am I reading this wrong, or is MCPS misrepresenting this to the Board and the public?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be 100% fine with no religious holidays being non school days if it meant not dealing with this nonsense and having a real summer break. I’d keep my kids home for Christmas and would understand that they would make up the work. If folks want to keep the kids home for Eid, they could do the same.
You say this knowing full well that MCPS can't safely operate school on Christmas so only other people's holidays will be affected, not yours
Not true at all. I'm not the PP but I would be perfectly fine with school happening on Good Friday or Easter Monday, and those are Christian holidays.
What do you mean it's not true at all? That PP proposed having school on Christmas. Gmafb
Huh? I was responding to the snarky comment after that which said that "you say this knowing full well that MCPS can't safely operate school on Christmas so only other people's holidays will be affected." The PP proposed having no religious holidays at all, so it's not just non-Christians that would be impacted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be 100% fine with no religious holidays being non school days if it meant not dealing with this nonsense and having a real summer break. I’d keep my kids home for Christmas and would understand that they would make up the work. If folks want to keep the kids home for Eid, they could do the same.
You say this knowing full well that MCPS can't safely operate school on Christmas so only other people's holidays will be affected, not yours
Not true at all. I'm not the PP but I would be perfectly fine with school happening on Good Friday or Easter Monday, and those are Christian holidays.
What do you mean it's not true at all? That PP proposed having school on Christmas. Gmafb
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is about MCPS wanting to provide as little instruction as possible because providing instruction costs money and they need that money to spend on contracts so they can get their kickbacks
If they are adding days its not about instruction costs but this doesn't work as people already have plans, jobs, child care lined up, travel, etc. And, many of the schools don't have reliable, consistent air conditioning and as of April, the classrooms can be pretty misreable. In August its going to be horrible and they will have to shut down for heat.
Anonymous wrote:This is about MCPS wanting to provide as little instruction as possible because providing instruction costs money and they need that money to spend on contracts so they can get their kickbacks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused, are they proposing moving the last day a week earlier too? or just moving the first day back so they can add in extra days?
They are proposing moving the last day of school back from June 16th to June 11th. They say they need to do this in order to be able to fit in extra makeup days after the end of the school year. But 1) they don't actually need those extra 3 makeup days at the end of the year, the state says they only need 3 and that brings them to 6; and 2) the state explicitly said that the makeup days should not be scheduled at the end of the school year.
See the presentation, page 15: https://go.boarddocs.com/mabe/mcpsmd/Board.nsf/files/DT7SZF751736/$file/Proposed%20Amendments%202026-2027%20SY%20Calendar%20PPT%20260416.pdf
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused, are they proposing moving the last day a week earlier too? or just moving the first day back so they can add in extra days?
Anonymous wrote:The state needs to change the antiquated law about Good Friday and Easter Monday.[/quote
Agreed. I grew up in the Methodist and Lutheran churches, and we never performed any religious observance on Easter Monday. Is it common in other denominations? And Good Friday will often have evening services available, but even if it's a mid-afternoon service, you can pull the kids out a little early. (I really get a lot out of the Good Friday services, so I'd be happy to pull my kids out to go to one.)