Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they are worried staff would blow off all the PD. (I am staff and Fridays are a skeleton crew as it is)
But I thought teachers were heros?
Anonymous wrote:I think they are worried staff would blow off all the PD. (I am staff and Fridays are a skeleton crew as it is)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can all be summarized as this: the school calendar is about everything but learning.
Yup. APS made that super clear when they put an early release next year on 10/30, with Halloween on 10/31, and no school on 11/1. All three of those days are a total loss. The early release should 100% have been on Halloween when kids are so already distracted.
It’s No School November. It’s been this way for years. They barely go to school in November. My older kids are now in college and it’s always been No School November.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can all be summarized as this: the school calendar is about everything but learning.
Yup. APS made that super clear when they put an early release next year on 10/30, with Halloween on 10/31, and no school on 11/1. All three of those days are a total loss. The early release should 100% have been on Halloween when kids are so already distracted.
Anonymous wrote:While we’re on the subject, can we stop calling them half days? Kids are in school for almost 5 hours, and are dismissed just over 2 hours early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While we’re on the subject, can we stop calling them half days? Kids are in school for almost 5 hours, and are dismissed just over 2 hours early.
Except they keep lunch and recess the same, as well as specials, so it's half the academic content.
Anonymous wrote:While we’re on the subject, can we stop calling them half days? Kids are in school for almost 5 hours, and are dismissed just over 2 hours early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do we even have early release days?
We need certain number of days of instruction, but want to give time for teachers to grade and train. So we have half days that *magically* do both (poorly)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are a working parent, why does Wed vs Fri make a difference?
If you are a SAHP who could take that time and add it to a weekend, sure but if you’re a working parent wouldn’t you need childcare either way?
Because a lot of us are able to telework on Fridays. Less meetings are scheduled on Friday afternoons.
+1. Fewer in person meetings. More acceptable to end the day a touch early, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are a working parent, why does Wed vs Fri make a difference?
If you are a SAHP who could take that time and add it to a weekend, sure but if you’re a working parent wouldn’t you need childcare either way?
Because a lot of us are able to telework on Fridays. Less meetings are scheduled on Friday afternoons.
Anonymous wrote:If you are a working parent, why does Wed vs Fri make a difference?
If you are a SAHP who could take that time and add it to a weekend, sure but if you’re a working parent wouldn’t you need childcare either way?