Anonymous wrote:I actually very happy with current calendar. It is much easier to plan ahead for summer. Nobody can study late in June or in early August. The problem is not start and end date. Problem is MCPS with ton of closed days. It is MCPS that is by purpose trying to twist parents' hands and make our life miserable with crazy schedule during the year and rediculous spring break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I would be annoyed at year round school. You can pull your kids out for a vacation. You can also tutor your kids at home so there is no summer slide - its called parenting.
A school calendar that requires summer tutoring at home to prevent summer slide is not an effective school calendar.
Anonymous wrote:
I would be annoyed at year round school. You can pull your kids out for a vacation. You can also tutor your kids at home so there is no summer slide - its called parenting.
Anonymous wrote:I really wish MoCo would consider a year-round calendar with a much shorter summer and several longer breaks scattered through the year. Less summer slide, less kids missing school for family vacations because no one can afford to fly a family during peak summer (and with our growing multi national population it is becoming an ever bigger issue), and less burnout through the year. We seem to be hanging onto the old system just because that’s how we used to do it, but it really doesn’t make sense anymore. I’d rather my kids had several multi-week breaks through the year to relax, do a camp, or travel than the long slog they have now... better to be in school in the heat of August and then having a break and playing outside in the glory days of October.
Anonymous wrote:If I write to my legislator it will be to keep the current school calendar. I’m pretty happy about the way in which things are going. I don’t want my kid on a hot school bus or in a hot classroom.
Anonymous wrote:If I write to my legislator it will be to keep the current school calendar. I’m pretty happy about the way in which things are going. I don’t want my kid on a hot school bus or in a hot classroom.
Anonymous wrote:If I write to my legislator it will be to keep the current school calendar. I’m pretty happy about the way in which things are going. I don’t want my kid on a hot school bus or in a hot classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's silly to even discuss this since the teachers union is definitely not buying into a year around school without massive pay increases which aren't in the budget.
It wouldn’t mean more working days. It just means the school year is spread out through the year and has longer breaks throughout. I knew school staff from Florida that did this and they said once everyone adjusted they really loved it. My kids would much prefer to be in school in August than in late September or May, when being outside is so lovely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fingers crossed that this passes and we can have more buffer built into our schedule next year.
The 2019-2020 calendar has already been approved.
Even if this legislation passes, (1) I'm sure Hogan will veto it. (Will there be enough to overturn the veto? I kind of doubt it.) and (2) realistically, it won't be effective until 7/1/20 or even 10/1/20 at the earliest. MCPS BOE will already have adopted the 2020-2021 calendar, since that will be adopted at the end of 2019.
Still, I'll be writing my legislators!
That wouldn't look like bipartisan governing.
Anonymous wrote:It's silly to even discuss this since the teachers union is definitely not buying into a year around school without massive pay increases which aren't in the budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fingers crossed that this passes and we can have more buffer built into our schedule next year.
The 2019-2020 calendar has already been approved.
Even if this legislation passes, (1) I'm sure Hogan will veto it. (Will there be enough to overturn the veto? I kind of doubt it.) and (2) realistically, it won't be effective until 7/1/20 or even 10/1/20 at the earliest. MCPS BOE will already have adopted the 2020-2021 calendar, since that will be adopted at the end of 2019.
Still, I'll be writing my legislators!
Anonymous wrote:Fingers crossed that this passes and we can have more buffer built into our schedule next year.