Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read all this but I have heard that one reason has to do with equity. Poor families rely on big siblings to pick up little siblings from the bus and take care of them for the afternoon. Or they work after school.
Everyone knows it’d be better for the big kids to start later than the littles. And the irritating posters who say, just enforce earlier bedtimes, clearly don’t have teens themselves yet. It’s not that simple when their brains seem to “wake up” around 9 pm and they are just getting home from sports/music etc at 7 after a full day.
I hope MCPS considers doing this!
Actually some of us DO have teens and its not an option in our home. And, I have one kid who 1-2 days a week doesn't get home till after 9 AM. Its called parenting. So, when they get their first job or a college class is only scheduled at an earlier time, are you going to have a fit too?
Too bad, no one considers your person preference. Some of us DO have teens who need sleep. College is not high school, but meep trying to bring in irrelevant things to your lame argument.
If your kids need sleep they can go to bed earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Smaller school districts that are better at educating are worse than too large school districts not better at educating. Got it.
Huh???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Smaller school districts that are better at educating are worse than too large school districts not better at educating. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read all this but I have heard that one reason has to do with equity. Poor families rely on big siblings to pick up little siblings from the bus and take care of them for the afternoon. Or they work after school.
Everyone knows it’d be better for the big kids to start later than the littles. And the irritating posters who say, just enforce earlier bedtimes, clearly don’t have teens themselves yet. It’s not that simple when their brains seem to “wake up” around 9 pm and they are just getting home from sports/music etc at 7 after a full day.
I hope MCPS considers doing this!
Actually some of us DO have teens and its not an option in our home. And, I have one kid who 1-2 days a week doesn't get home till after 9 AM. Its called parenting. So, when they get their first job or a college class is only scheduled at an earlier time, are you going to have a fit too?
Too bad, no one considers your person preference. Some of us DO have teens who need sleep. College is not high school, but meep trying to bring in irrelevant things to your lame argument.
If your kids need sleep they can go to bed earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
LOL. Eanes school district has a total number of about 8,000 students, 67% White, less than 1% Black, 2.5% FARMS.
When they can educate at least 20,000 students, we'll take them seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read all this but I have heard that one reason has to do with equity. Poor families rely on big siblings to pick up little siblings from the bus and take care of them for the afternoon. Or they work after school.
Everyone knows it’d be better for the big kids to start later than the littles. And the irritating posters who say, just enforce earlier bedtimes, clearly don’t have teens themselves yet. It’s not that simple when their brains seem to “wake up” around 9 pm and they are just getting home from sports/music etc at 7 after a full day.
I hope MCPS considers doing this!
Actually some of us DO have teens and its not an option in our home. And, I have one kid who 1-2 days a week doesn't get home till after 9 AM. Its called parenting. So, when they get their first job or a college class is only scheduled at an earlier time, are you going to have a fit too?
Too bad, no one considers your person preference. Some of us DO have teens who need sleep. College is not high school, but meep trying to bring in irrelevant things to your lame argument.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?
Probably Eanes district. Ranks very high year after year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
I’m impressed with Loudon County. And somehow they still manage to have high school sports. Imagine that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Not really.
https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-later-school-start-time-gave-small-boost-to-grades-but-big-boost-to-sleep-new-study-finds/
Nationally, Minnesota has been at the forefront of starting school later in the morning. Edina, an affluent Minneapolis suburb, is believed to be the first town in the U.S. to shift to a later start, moving in 1996 from 7:20 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. in response to medical research about teen sleep. In 2014, the American Pediatric Association recommended an 8:30 a.m. start time for high schools and middle schools so that teens can get sufficient sleep.
Schools have been slow to heed the doctors’ advice. Only 17 percent of U.S. high schools start the day at 8:30 a.m. or later, according to the most recent federal data. The average start time for high school across the nation remains a half hour earlier, at 8:00 a.m.. South Carolina has the latest high school start time in the nation of 8:34 a.m., followed by Alaska, Minnesota and Iowa. The earliest is Louisiana, where high schools start at 7:30 a.m., on average.
I realize it's a district-by-district decision, and that the state figures are probably an average.
Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun County starts ES at ~7:50 (but that will change next year), MS at ~8:20 and HS at ~9:15.
It's been that way as long as I can remember. We like it and don't understand why everybody doesn't do it this way.
Most schools in the country do. Mcps is behind.
Seems like the schools you're referring to are the ones that are behind whereas MCPS is doing it right!
Actually the school district I’m referring to is in the top 3 public school districts in the country. And has a high school that has one of the highest ratings for sending kids to MIT.
You would be wrong, mcps is no where near the top 3 best school districts in the country. Maybe in the top 500?
Better luck next time.
Which school district is that?