Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:APS 2021-2022 CALENDAR ALERT! Be sure to read the email from APS and respond to the survey. They really seem to be trying to push forward quick & dirty without time for parent/staff/community input. The survey is only open through October 30th!
They're adding four religious holidays (Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, one Eid, and Diwali), which do not seem to be up for negotiation.
This necessitates starting school about a week earlier. If you object to an earlier start or later end to the school year, the holidays the survey lets you elect to cut in exchange (you are to pick 5) are Columbus/Peoples Indigenous Day, day before Thanksgiving, Winter Break days, or government/secular holidays like Veterans Day or MLK day, for example.
Wow. I thought this post was offensive when you posted it on AEM and I still think so. You seem to be quite annoyed that APS is respecting more major non-Christian holidays. The only thing that disappoints me about this proposed calendar, aside from reactions like yours, is that it took APS so long to do this.
Anonymous wrote:Love the calendar. But, still looking forward to the parade of families complaining about their summer beach house reservations and the School Board’s bizarre toleration of it like last year. So self absorbed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 days is plenty of time! This year it works out nicely because Rosh Hashana extends Labor Day weekend. My only gripe with this calendar is that we get out too late. I grew up starting school mid-August and getting out by Memorial Day and prefer that. I felt it was easier when I taught that schedule too.
+1. This is my gripe too. Starting earlier (which I prefer) but getting out at the same time. Time to let some of those other holidays go (which I doubt will happen, they've been on the calendar too long), and/or have a slightly shortened winter break.
+1, i took the survey and said to keep the added religious holidays that they built in (even though my family does not celebrate them), but remove the Friday before labor day and the 4 days before xmas eve. Then they can get out June 10 instead of the 17th. Still provides a 10 day winter break with weekends. The proposed calendar has a 16 day winter break including weekends. Even if you are traveling for the holidays, that is plenty of time to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 days is plenty of time! This year it works out nicely because Rosh Hashana extends Labor Day weekend. My only gripe with this calendar is that we get out too late. I grew up starting school mid-August and getting out by Memorial Day and prefer that. I felt it was easier when I taught that schedule too.
+1. This is my gripe too. Starting earlier (which I prefer) but getting out at the same time. Time to let some of those other holidays go (which I doubt will happen, they've been on the calendar too long), and/or have a slightly shortened winter break.
+1, i took the survey and said to keep the added religious holidays that they built in (even though my family does not celebrate them), but remove the Friday before labor day and the 4 days before xmas eve. Then they can get out June 10 instead of the 17th. Still provides a 10 day winter break with weekends. The proposed calendar has a 16 day winter break including weekends. Even if you are traveling for the holidays, that is plenty of time to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 days is plenty of time! This year it works out nicely because Rosh Hashana extends Labor Day weekend. My only gripe with this calendar is that we get out too late. I grew up starting school mid-August and getting out by Memorial Day and prefer that. I felt it was easier when I taught that schedule too.
+1. This is my gripe too. Starting earlier (which I prefer) but getting out at the same time. Time to let some of those other holidays go (which I doubt will happen, they've been on the calendar too long), and/or have a slightly shortened winter break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 days is plenty of time! This year it works out nicely because Rosh Hashana extends Labor Day weekend. My only gripe with this calendar is that we get out too late. I grew up starting school mid-August and getting out by Memorial Day and prefer that. I felt it was easier when I taught that schedule too.
I prefer this because it aligns with my older kid’s private high school. He gets out end of May and starts mid-August.
I prefer having all of June off then all of August.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop being a bigot, Beverly.
+1
And if you can't, there are plenty of parochial schools in Arlington that can serve your narrow-minded vision. The horror of having to explain to your children that no, Hanukkah isn't a big deal and in fact the highest holy days for Jews are Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur and families have been forced to make the choice of school or services for years. And Eid and Diwali -- OMG.
Anonymous wrote:10 days is plenty of time! This year it works out nicely because Rosh Hashana extends Labor Day weekend. My only gripe with this calendar is that we get out too late. I grew up starting school mid-August and getting out by Memorial Day and prefer that. I felt it was easier when I taught that schedule too.
Anonymous wrote:Stop being a bigot, Beverly.
Anonymous wrote:Wow I fully support this calendar! What an amazing thing for my children to get our religious holidays off. Is this what it's felt like to be Christian all this time?
Thanks for the heads up, OP! I just completed the survey to support the calendar.