Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i agree with OP -- why should School A get theirs on Thurs. and School B gets theirs on Sat. and School C gets theirs on Monday?
Drop them at the same time.
That is perfectly fine.
As long as the students at each school are getting their letters at the same time as their classmates, everything is fine.
There is no need to completely synchronize the schools. As long as the entire district receives their scores in the same general time frame, all is well.
Spoken like one who has her letter OR an administrator who doesn't want to deal with organizing this.
They don't have to be mailed from a central office. Simply tell each school to mail out the letters on <date here>. Is this really a hardship? People get stressed about this process, and it seems like a tiny, tiny concession to standardize the mailings. If I knew the letters were mailed on a certain date, I would stop guessing after a few days.
Oh, AAP isn't a big deal to you? Then what are you doing hanging out on an AAP message board?
No, just another parent.
And if this board is any indication, the scores all got mailed on Friday, with the exception of one or two schools that stuck the info in the backpacks on Friday.
I hardly think a two day difference in the delivery of scores is a catastrophe of epic proportions and is certainly not worth the hissy fit you are throwing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i agree with OP -- why should School A get theirs on Thurs. and School B gets theirs on Sat. and School C gets theirs on Monday?
Drop them at the same time.
That is perfectly fine.
As long as the students at each school are getting their letters at the same time as their classmates, everything is fine.
There is no need to completely synchronize the schools. As long as the entire district receives their scores in the same general time frame, all is well.
Spoken like one who has her letter OR an administrator who doesn't want to deal with organizing this.
They don't have to be mailed from a central office. Simply tell each school to mail out the letters on <date here>. Is this really a hardship? People get stressed about this process, and it seems like a tiny, tiny concession to standardize the mailings. If I knew the letters were mailed on a certain date, I would stop guessing after a few days.
Oh, AAP isn't a big deal to you? Then what are you doing hanging out on an AAP message board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i agree with OP -- why should School A get theirs on Thurs. and School B gets theirs on Sat. and School C gets theirs on Monday?
Drop them at the same time.
That is perfectly fine.
As long as the students at each school are getting their letters at the same time as their classmates, everything is fine.
There is no need to completely synchronize the schools. As long as the entire district receives their scores in the same general time frame, all is well.
Spoken like one who has her letter OR an administrator who doesn't want to deal with organizing this.
They don't have to be mailed from a central office. Simply tell each school to mail out the letters on <date here>. Is this really a hardship? People get stressed about this process, and it seems like a tiny, tiny concession to standardize the mailings. If I knew the letters were mailed on a certain date, I would stop guessing after a few days.
Oh, AAP isn't a big deal to you? Then what are you doing hanging out on an AAP message board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i agree with OP -- why should School A get theirs on Thurs. and School B gets theirs on Sat. and School C gets theirs on Monday?
Drop them at the same time.
That is perfectly fine.
As long as the students at each school are getting their letters at the same time as their classmates, everything is fine.
There is no need to completely synchronize the schools. As long as the entire district receives their scores in the same general time frame, all is well.
Spoken like one who has her letter OR an administrator who doesn't want to deal with organizing this.
They don't have to be mailed from a central office. Simply tell each school to mail out the letters on <date here>. Is this really a hardship? People get stressed about this process, and it seems like a tiny, tiny concession to standardize the mailings. If I knew the letters were mailed on a certain date, I would stop guessing after a few days.
Oh, AAP isn't a big deal to you? Then what are you doing hanging out on an AAP message board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i agree with OP -- why should School A get theirs on Thurs. and School B gets theirs on Sat. and School C gets theirs on Monday?
Drop them at the same time.
That is perfectly fine.
As long as the students at each school are getting their letters at the same time as their classmates, everything is fine.
There is no need to completely synchronize the schools. As long as the entire district receives their scores in the same general time frame, all is well.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want to clutter up any of the other threads, but I know FCPS staff read here.
In the future, I hope FCPS standardizes the mailing date for pool letters and scores, and requires either mailing OR sending home in the backpack. It's ridiculous that different schools have different protocols, especially with this kind of information.