Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just up the student holidays. Ridiculous! Sorry, but we don’t need off for every religious holiday. Give them a fall break, winter break, February break and spring break, like other secular countries. And, let them out two weeks earlier in June. It has to be impossible to teach with all the sporadic days off.
ITA and also, let's make it easier on teachers and students and make sure the breaks are aligned to the end of the quarter like they are in more secular countries - e.g., winter break comes at the end of January, not December, and spring break comes at the end of Q3, rather than being tied to Easter. This year, high school students are going to have exams either the week before spring break in which case they come back after spring break and do nothing for a week, OR they're going to go on spring break and have to come back to exams. Either one is a ridiculous scenario.
I’ve taught high school for over 20 years and read your post multiple times. I don’t understand your reasoning at all. Why are they doing nothing? If there is an exam, they start new material after. It doesn’t matter if that falls the week before or after a break. No one says there is one week until break so let’s sit here and do nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
Aaaaaand that’s why I send my kids to private school. Teachers like this.
I’m not a teacher. I’m a parent who accepts responsibility for my kids. I’ve never considered the school a daycare center.
Fine, if you say so. I used to teach in a public school. Watching teachers spin this kind of garbage is why my kids will never see the inside of a public school.
I’m sure the schools are happy that you and your kids are gone. You sound like an entitled jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just up the student holidays. Ridiculous! Sorry, but we don’t need off for every religious holiday. Give them a fall break, winter break, February break and spring break, like other secular countries. And, let them out two weeks earlier in June. It has to be impossible to teach with all the sporadic days off.
ITA and also, let's make it easier on teachers and students and make sure the breaks are aligned to the end of the quarter like they are in more secular countries - e.g., winter break comes at the end of January, not December, and spring break comes at the end of Q3, rather than being tied to Easter. This year, high school students are going to have exams either the week before spring break in which case they come back after spring break and do nothing for a week, OR they're going to go on spring break and have to come back to exams. Either one is a ridiculous scenario.
I’ve taught high school for over 20 years and read your post multiple times. I don’t understand your reasoning at all. Why are they doing nothing? If there is an exam, they start new material after. It doesn’t matter if that falls the week before or after a break. No one says there is one week until break so let’s sit here and do nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just up the student holidays. Ridiculous! Sorry, but we don’t need off for every religious holiday. Give them a fall break, winter break, February break and spring break, like other secular countries. And, let them out two weeks earlier in June. It has to be impossible to teach with all the sporadic days off.
ITA and also, let's make it easier on teachers and students and make sure the breaks are aligned to the end of the quarter like they are in more secular countries - e.g., winter break comes at the end of January, not December, and spring break comes at the end of Q3, rather than being tied to Easter. This year, high school students are going to have exams either the week before spring break in which case they come back after spring break and do nothing for a week, OR they're going to go on spring break and have to come back to exams. Either one is a ridiculous scenario.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just up the student holidays. Ridiculous! Sorry, but we don’t need off for every religious holiday. Give them a fall break, winter break, February break and spring break, like other secular countries. And, let them out two weeks earlier in June. It has to be impossible to teach with all the sporadic days off.
ITA and also, let's make it easier on teachers and students and make sure the breaks are aligned to the end of the quarter like they are in more secular countries - e.g., winter break comes at the end of January, not December, and spring break comes at the end of Q3, rather than being tied to Easter. This year, high school students are going to have exams either the week before spring break in which case they come back after spring break and do nothing for a week, OR they're going to go on spring break and have to come back to exams. Either one is a ridiculous scenario.
Anonymous wrote:I just up the student holidays. Ridiculous! Sorry, but we don’t need off for every religious holiday. Give them a fall break, winter break, February break and spring break, like other secular countries. And, let them out two weeks earlier in June. It has to be impossible to teach with all the sporadic days off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
Aaaaaand that’s why I send my kids to private school. Teachers like this.
I’m not a teacher. I’m a parent who accepts responsibility for my kids. I’ve never considered the school a daycare center.
Fine, if you say so. I used to teach in a public school. Watching teachers spin this kind of garbage is why my kids will never see the inside of a public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
Aaaaaand that’s why I send my kids to private school. Teachers like this.
I’m not a teacher. I’m a parent who accepts responsibility for my kids. I’ve never considered the school a daycare center.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
Aaaaaand that’s why I send my kids to private school. Teachers like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
If only you teachers embraced this outlook yourselves during the first yr of the pandemic...but I can't teach! I have kids at home!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
No matter how much you want it to be true, school is not daycare. Teachers are not daycare providers. You chose to have kids. You choose to work. It is 100% on you to figure this out.
If only you teachers embraced this outlook yourselves during the first yr of the pandemic...but I can't teach! I have kids at home!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.
Because many of us parents have to work and we need our kids in school while we work!
Anonymous wrote:Kids love these days off..they break up the monotony of a long school year. Teachers generally don't mind them because days off here and there really aren't that disruptive to learning. The only ones who really care are...parents.
Not sure why we want kids to experience the same 9-5, 5 day a week grind of so many of their parents.