Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supervised recess would be offered to middle school students every day for 15 minutes and to elementary school students in two separate 15-minute segments “as practicable.”
We currently have a 30 minute recess at the ES level. I hope we can keep that rather than two 15-minute blocks.
They tried this a few years ago at elementary level when 30 minutes became required. Most schools found the transitions for 2 times to be a hassle and went back to a 30 minute block.
As a teacher, I want the 30 minute block and 5-10 minute brain break in the morning outside
+1, this was impractical in ES. As soon as you walked to the playground, a third of recess was already over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ and I also have a daughter who has her period. She asks a teacher to use the bathroom during class when needed.
DP here , I don’t have a MS kid but I’ve heard things from my friends and CWers with older kids. I’ve heard that the bathrooms are closed or very heavily discouraged/use of them is punished or restricted during the day/during class time because of kids doing dumb kid stuff in there? The “tearing the soap dispensers off the wall” kind of dumb stuff. Or teachers will tell the kids they get 3 bathroom breaks per semester or something. It sounds like they can’t really rely on class time to take a bathroom break is what I’m hearing.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this the purpose of PE?
Anonymous wrote:My DD at Franklin has a half hour recess. She said they basically walk around the field (girls) while the sporty fast boys who get to the basketball courts first play basketball. She hates it bc it messes her hair up and she's freezing cold (her words not mine) (and don't try to say wear more appropriate clothes unless you want your head bit off).
Anonymous wrote:^ and I also have a daughter who has her period. She asks a teacher to use the bathroom during class when needed.
Anonymous wrote:As one of the early proponents of Middle School recess, this is why I think it's essential.
1. Right now, my daughter gets to school at 7:15 in the morning and doesn't see the sun until 2:15 in the afternoon. She goes from Algebra to science to English without even a small break. As an adult, I can't go from meeting to meeting to meeting without a small break to clear my head.
2. All these people who say no one should get a break because a small segment of the population might have sex or get into a fight on school grounds are wrong. First of all, fights are going to happen - its better if it happens where adults are around to deal with the consequences. If kids are having sex on school grounds as 13 and 14 year olds, then a lot of failures happened. Recess is not going to change that and let's not punish the vast majority who will use that time constructively.
3. Most importantly, girls are getting their periods at that age. Right now, my daughter has one 30-minute break during those 7 hours. She sometimes has to choose between eating lunch and going to the bathroom. That is not a fair choice.
4. All over this country, kids in middle school are having recess. In California, we had 2 breaks - 20 minutes brunch and a 40-minute lunch. Kids learned how to interact with their peers, used the time to study if they needed to and went outside for fresh air. Middle Schools in FCPS treat the kids like they are one step away from Rikers. It's not healthy for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Middle school teacher here. Our 15 minute "break" (recess time) happens during our lunch block. In that block, kids will have a 30 minute lunch, a 15 minute break, and an 85ish minute class. The break is great, but we've had challenges with giving the kids structure and providing appropriate activities. Our equipment is very limited, and not all classes have access to a safe area for play. For example, my class is assigned to have break in a small courtyard by the staff parking lots, while other classes can go to the blacktop and field area. It's good for the kids to have the break, but its implementation definitely needs to be rethought.