Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are times I feel like that person…
Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had maybe one field trip a year and that was it. I don’t remember any in MS or HS. Field trips are not a necessity, they can be fun and educational but they are not mandatory.
Plenty of schools don’t have enough money to fund field trips and they don’t have PTAs that can run fund raising to provide field trips and after school activities. The PTA cannot do the paperwork associated with the field trip, that paperwork ends up being the backbone for any liability that might arise from the trip. Teachers are over worked as it is, adding on extra things is a lot. Kids behavior has gone downhill which makes field trips even more of a nightmare, do you think it is fun to watch the kids who are nightmares at school at a museum? Or Cox farm? Or any other location?
In my experience title 1 schools have enough funds but not enough manpower. These are the kids who need it the most. Make it happen if you can or advocate for it if you can’t
So you want the people who are already burdened and overextended… to give more?
No.
Parents need to volunteer or the school needs to hire a coordinator
FCPS schools all had to cut SPED positions this school year and you think there’s staffing money to hire a… field trip planner?
As posted earlier, Lewis HS appears to have a coordinator whose job is field trip planning for their academy program. They've arranged close to a hundred trips in three years - in my opinion that seems like having a field trip planner at every school is worth it, if that level of production is to be expected.
Sorry, are you saying we hire 200 field trip coordinators.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are times I feel like that person…
Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had maybe one field trip a year and that was it. I don’t remember any in MS or HS. Field trips are not a necessity, they can be fun and educational but they are not mandatory.
Plenty of schools don’t have enough money to fund field trips and they don’t have PTAs that can run fund raising to provide field trips and after school activities. The PTA cannot do the paperwork associated with the field trip, that paperwork ends up being the backbone for any liability that might arise from the trip. Teachers are over worked as it is, adding on extra things is a lot. Kids behavior has gone downhill which makes field trips even more of a nightmare, do you think it is fun to watch the kids who are nightmares at school at a museum? Or Cox farm? Or any other location?
In my experience title 1 schools have enough funds but not enough manpower. These are the kids who need it the most. Make it happen if you can or advocate for it if you can’t
So you want the people who are already burdened and overextended… to give more?
No.
Parents need to volunteer or the school needs to hire a coordinator
FCPS schools all had to cut SPED positions this school year and you think there’s staffing money to hire a… field trip planner?
As posted earlier, Lewis HS appears to have a coordinator whose job is field trip planning for their academy program. They've arranged close to a hundred trips in three years - in my opinion that seems like having a field trip planner at every school is worth it, if that level of production is to be expected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took my 3rd grade students to the zoo back in the early 2000s. One group joined the rest of the class with ice cream cones in their hands. The chaperone decided that would be a good idea! All hell broke lose when the other kids saw that. Did I tell the 4th grade teachers to never bring that parent along? Hell yeah!
Ot my first grade class where one chaperone took her group 9n the pricey train ride around the zoo. This had been discussed prior as a "not to do,"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A love of learning. Bringing history to life. Teachers excited to teach and show their student's the connection between what they are learning and the history around us.
So the “bringing history to life” is 45 minutes at the museum or site. The rest of the day is bus rides and organizing groups/meals.
Meanwhile, the teacher put in 3 weeks of planning and an aggravating amount of hours chasing permission slips. She then had to discipline students on the bus and at the exhibit. She had to constantly remind chaperones that they are on duty and can’t treat this as a fun vacation, and maybe they should get off their phones every now and then.
And all the kids will remember is singing on the bus ride.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are times I feel like that person…
Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had maybe one field trip a year and that was it. I don’t remember any in MS or HS. Field trips are not a necessity, they can be fun and educational but they are not mandatory.
Plenty of schools don’t have enough money to fund field trips and they don’t have PTAs that can run fund raising to provide field trips and after school activities. The PTA cannot do the paperwork associated with the field trip, that paperwork ends up being the backbone for any liability that might arise from the trip. Teachers are over worked as it is, adding on extra things is a lot. Kids behavior has gone downhill which makes field trips even more of a nightmare, do you think it is fun to watch the kids who are nightmares at school at a museum? Or Cox farm? Or any other location?
In my experience title 1 schools have enough funds but not enough manpower. These are the kids who need it the most. Make it happen if you can or advocate for it if you can’t
So you want the people who are already burdened and overextended… to give more?
No.
Parents need to volunteer or the school needs to hire a coordinator
FCPS schools all had to cut SPED positions this school year and you think there’s staffing money to hire a… field trip planner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are times I feel like that person…
Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had maybe one field trip a year and that was it. I don’t remember any in MS or HS. Field trips are not a necessity, they can be fun and educational but they are not mandatory.
Plenty of schools don’t have enough money to fund field trips and they don’t have PTAs that can run fund raising to provide field trips and after school activities. The PTA cannot do the paperwork associated with the field trip, that paperwork ends up being the backbone for any liability that might arise from the trip. Teachers are over worked as it is, adding on extra things is a lot. Kids behavior has gone downhill which makes field trips even more of a nightmare, do you think it is fun to watch the kids who are nightmares at school at a museum? Or Cox farm? Or any other location?
In my experience title 1 schools have enough funds but not enough manpower. These are the kids who need it the most. Make it happen if you can or advocate for it if you can’t
So you want the people who are already burdened and overextended… to give more?
No.
Parents need to volunteer or the school needs to hire a coordinator
Anonymous wrote:I also remember a field trip to the Building Museum that my child was really excited about. Turns out, they only saw the lobby and then were ushered into a classroom-type space to hear a lecture and do a craft. What a TOTAL waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are times I feel like that person…
Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had maybe one field trip a year and that was it. I don’t remember any in MS or HS. Field trips are not a necessity, they can be fun and educational but they are not mandatory.
Plenty of schools don’t have enough money to fund field trips and they don’t have PTAs that can run fund raising to provide field trips and after school activities. The PTA cannot do the paperwork associated with the field trip, that paperwork ends up being the backbone for any liability that might arise from the trip. Teachers are over worked as it is, adding on extra things is a lot. Kids behavior has gone downhill which makes field trips even more of a nightmare, do you think it is fun to watch the kids who are nightmares at school at a museum? Or Cox farm? Or any other location?
In my experience title 1 schools have enough funds but not enough manpower. These are the kids who need it the most. Make it happen if you can or advocate for it if you can’t
So you want the people who are already burdened and overextended… to give more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the kids care about on a field trip is lunch. This is not talked about but it’s true. If I take my students on a field trip, they’re asking what is there to buy to eat at the destination. If what is available is not appealing to them, they choose not to go on the field trip. If they do go, they whine and rush through the activity and ask when we came done so they can go buy food. Then they want to sit and eat the food, as long as is possible. I can’t say I don’t get it, but trust me that the hassle of planning a field trip for them to treat it like a lunch date with their friends is not worth it and I’m not sure what “love of learning and history” you think they’re getting from them perseverating on when we can go to Elevation Burger and the gelato place at whatever stop we’re at.
This is funny!
I was at the Museum of Natural History recently. A high-school aged group went by. The conversation I overheard while the tour guide was explaining the exhibit to kids who weren’t listening:
“How much longer until lunch?”
“I don’t know. Maybe like 30 minutes?”
“Ugh!!”
Anonymous wrote:I took my 3rd grade students to the zoo back in the early 2000s. One group joined the rest of the class with ice cream cones in their hands. The chaperone decided that would be a good idea! All hell broke lose when the other kids saw that. Did I tell the 4th grade teachers to never bring that parent along? Hell yeah!
Anonymous wrote:In kindergarten (fcps) we did a pumpkin patch and also the zoo.
Anonymous wrote:All the kids care about on a field trip is lunch. This is not talked about but it’s true. If I take my students on a field trip, they’re asking what is there to buy to eat at the destination. If what is available is not appealing to them, they choose not to go on the field trip. If they do go, they whine and rush through the activity and ask when we came done so they can go buy food. Then they want to sit and eat the food, as long as is possible. I can’t say I don’t get it, but trust me that the hassle of planning a field trip for them to treat it like a lunch date with their friends is not worth it and I’m not sure what “love of learning and history” you think they’re getting from them perseverating on when we can go to Elevation Burger and the gelato place at whatever stop we’re at.