Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some of the DC charter schools make teachers do home visits!
Also regular DCPS, not just charters. It was honestly super helpful in making my PK kid excited about school.
Our FCPS elementary does home visits. It’s very sweet and a great start to the year. Very helpful for the teachers as well, I imagine.
For Kindergarten or for all grades?
Anonymous wrote:Well, all this bickering and the day has almost come! Tomorrow night check your Schoology. Teachers may have posted. If not, just wait ONE more day for Thursday morning. Wasn’t so hard, was it? If there are still conflicts with scheduling, you have from Thursday to Monday. At my school, students are still changing up schedules in the beginning of the year, and minor changes all year round. Have patience, because just 1-2 more days for you to complain to the counselor all you want!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some of the DC charter schools make teachers do home visits!
Also regular DCPS, not just charters. It was honestly super helpful in making my PK kid excited about school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some of the DC charter schools make teachers do home visits!
Also regular DCPS, not just charters. It was honestly super helpful in making my PK kid excited about school.
Our FCPS elementary does home visits. It’s very sweet and a great start to the year. Very helpful for the teachers as well, I imagine.
Anonymous wrote:Where is the middle school schedule posted to? Schoology or ParentVUE? If Schoology, where please?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some of the DC charter schools make teachers do home visits!
Also regular DCPS, not just charters. It was honestly super helpful in making my PK kid excited about school.
Anonymous wrote:I know some of the DC charter schools make teachers do home visits!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I taught middle school they made us call all our homeroom families (25ish kids) and invite them to open house. Then we had to follow up with emails. We had to document 3 attempts at phone calls before we could wash our hands of it.
It used to take 3-4 hours of precious work week time.
Is this a lower performing school pyramid with disengaged parents?
If so, calling makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:When I taught middle school they made us call all our homeroom families (25ish kids) and invite them to open house. Then we had to follow up with emails. We had to document 3 attempts at phone calls before we could wash our hands of it.
It used to take 3-4 hours of precious work week time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids’ ES had the class assignment emails out on Friday!
Before even the teachers went back? FCPS teachers’ first contracted day for most classroom teachers was just today (Monday). Either you’re a liar or not in FCPS. If the latter, you’re on the wrong board.
Nope, it was Friday at about 6 pm! An FCPS ES in the South County pyramid. I’ve heard that they have the class assignments done in June after students get out and then they just wait to send them until the end of the summer.
Teachers work with admin to create the lists in June at every elementary school I have worked it. There are just some small schools with limited changes that can send these out with confidence earlier. Other schools hold off if they are large or have a transient population. Our school is very military heavy so we wait, even though we did create classes in June.
Our school is military heavy too, everything is in a lot of pyramids. I feel like if your school isn’t getting the teacher assignments out by Tuesday before school starts on Monday, it’s because they’re afraid of the parents’ reactions and the admin/principals can’t handle parent drama, or because they’re getting started on them much later than other schools.