Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
That would be a REALLY long lunch for me. I don't even work that far away from our school but it would take at least 30-45 minutes in the middle of the day to metro back and walk from the metro. So assuming an hour meeting, that would mean a 2-2.5 hour lunch. I don't know any working people who could do this except the ones that work from home.
OP here. Yes, a 2 1/2 hour lunch, which I thought would be less disruptive to a work day than arrive into the office at 11.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
That would be a REALLY long lunch for me. I don't even work that far away from our school but it would take at least 30-45 minutes in the middle of the day to metro back and walk from the metro. So assuming an hour meeting, that would mean a 2-2.5 hour lunch. I don't know any working people who could do this except the ones that work from home.
OP here. Yes, a 2 1/2 hour lunch, which I thought would be less disruptive to a work day than arrive into the office at 11.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
That would be a REALLY long lunch for me. I don't even work that far away from our school but it would take at least 30-45 minutes in the middle of the day to metro back and walk from the metro. So assuming an hour meeting, that would mean a 2-2.5 hour lunch. I don't know any working people who could do this except the ones that work from home.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for your replies! Very interesting.
I brought up the lunch meeting because I also thought it would be somewhat of a compromise between the needs of the SAHMs and the working parents. I can take a long lunch, but I cannot roll in 3 hours late (which would happen with a 9am meeting). Also, I'd kind of rather take a long lunch from work than drag my tired small kids to a meeting at the time when I should be reading books to them in their PJs.
I'm in a transitioning neighborhood bilingual DCPS, and the parents group currently meets at 9am. Very few working parents can attend, and I worry about what I see as an impending clash between the mostly-hispanic SAHMs, and the newcomer mostly-anglophone mostly-working parents, when the latter come in and ask to have evening meetings.
Fingers crossed for a smooth collaborative blending of backgrounds and skills. And come to think of it, it's the same potential clash at every corner and every event or decision in the school, so we'll just have to take it step by step.
Anonymous wrote:I have never heard of daytime PTA/PTSA meetings... and I'm a teacher! It would mean that kids, teachers and working parents were excluded and only the SAHM/SAHDs would be running the whole organization. Yikes.