Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also just want to say it is hard to find time to travel when summer is so short. No wonder families have to take time off during the school year. Do what you gotta do. FCPS hasn’t actually set a good example.
You seriously need more than 9 weeks of time to travel?![]()
DP and you sure are a gem. If you are traveling with a large (4+) family you typically try to avoid Labor Day, Fourth of July and Juneteeth and (in past years…) memorial day. Getting decently priced airfare is hard. Paying thousands extra to go in the summer so your kid can watch a movie the Friday before Christmas Break isn’t really a smart tradeoff.
Avoiding travel on Juneteenth??? 😂 Were you always this dramatic and entitled, PP, or is this a recent phenomenon?
Go on Kayak and see what prices look like on federal holidays. Tell me how many thousands of dollars you believe a family should spend for their kids to watch movies next Friday. To me, thats what reeks of privilege.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also just want to say it is hard to find time to travel when summer is so short. No wonder families have to take time off during the school year. Do what you gotta do. FCPS hasn’t actually set a good example.
You seriously need more than 9 weeks of time to travel?![]()
DP and you sure are a gem. If you are traveling with a large (4+) family you typically try to avoid Labor Day, Fourth of July and Juneteeth and (in past years…) memorial day. Getting decently priced airfare is hard. Paying thousands extra to go in the summer so your kid can watch a movie the Friday before Christmas Break isn’t really a smart tradeoff.
Avoiding travel on Juneteenth??? 😂 Were you always this dramatic and entitled, PP, or is this a recent phenomenon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also just want to say it is hard to find time to travel when summer is so short. No wonder families have to take time off during the school year. Do what you gotta do. FCPS hasn’t actually set a good example.
You seriously need more than 9 weeks of time to travel?![]()
DP and you sure are a gem. If you are traveling with a large (4+) family you typically try to avoid Labor Day, Fourth of July and Juneteeth and (in past years…) memorial day. Getting decently priced airfare is hard. Paying thousands extra to go in the summer so your kid can watch a movie the Friday before Christmas Break isn’t really a smart tradeoff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What absolute bs. I hope no one actually listens to them. Don’t forget how they treated school during Covid. It wasn’t important then and we only got 4 days of school for an entire freaking year on a computer! My child’s teacher actually moved out of the area during the school year and was allowed to still be employed by FCPS.
F off, FCPS.
People who are continuing to post about Covid need serious help. [b]It was 4.5 to 5.5 years ago. Move on.
Why do you care where your child's teacher lived? If he/she was still logging in to Blackboard Collaborate and was teaching, how is it your business where he/she lived? Do you have any concept of how many FCPS teachers live "out of the area," yet still teach in FCPS? There are teachers who live in West Virginia, Eastern MD, Baltimore, Stafford, etc. It's no one's business!
Nope. We parents will never forget how teachers jumped the line to get vaccinated and then refused to come into work. We will never forget the hell that was virtual school.
So we parents will take a vacation when we damn well want to.
"WE" parents?![]()
The vast majority of "we parents" have our mental health in check, so we moved on from Covid-related closures, years ago.
The majority of "we parents" don't hold grudges against people, especially ones who probably weren't remotely involved in decisions regarding return to school.
The majority of " we parents" don't process emotion like a toddler, "I don't like what you said, so I'm taking my toys and going home."
The majority of "we parents" have more intelligence than a gnat, so we don't have our children miss additional school when the concern is missed instructional hours.
I’m a DP but I think the majority of parents who had kids in school during COVID no longer consider the schools credible on the specific issue of attendance. The 2025-2026 calendar, which even the school board realizes is brutally unpopular, makes it worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What absolute bs. I hope no one actually listens to them. Don’t forget how they treated school during Covid. It wasn’t important then and we only got 4 days of school for an entire freaking year on a computer! My child’s teacher actually moved out of the area during the school year and was allowed to still be employed by FCPS.
F off, FCPS.
People who are continuing to post about Covid need serious help. [b]It was 4.5 to 5.5 years ago. Move on.
Why do you care where your child's teacher lived? If he/she was still logging in to Blackboard Collaborate and was teaching, how is it your business where he/she lived? Do you have any concept of how many FCPS teachers live "out of the area," yet still teach in FCPS? There are teachers who live in West Virginia, Eastern MD, Baltimore, Stafford, etc. It's no one's business!
Nope. We parents will never forget how teachers jumped the line to get vaccinated and then refused to come into work. We will never forget the hell that was virtual school.
So we parents will take a vacation when we damn well want to.
"WE" parents?![]()
The vast majority of "we parents" have our mental health in check, so we moved on from Covid-related closures, years ago.
The majority of "we parents" don't hold grudges against people, especially ones who probably weren't remotely involved in decisions regarding return to school.
The majority of " we parents" don't process emotion like a toddler, "I don't like what you said, so I'm taking my toys and going home."
The majority of "we parents" have more intelligence than a gnat, so we don't have our children miss additional school when the concern is missed instructional hours.
Anonymous wrote:They aren't talking about students who are doing well despite their absences. They aren't talking about Asian kids going to visit family overseas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also just want to say it is hard to find time to travel when summer is so short. No wonder families have to take time off during the school year. Do what you gotta do. FCPS hasn’t actually set a good example.
You seriously need more than 9 weeks of time to travel?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Also just want to say it is hard to find time to travel when summer is so short. No wonder families have to take time off during the school year. Do what you gotta do. FCPS hasn’t actually set a good example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS: Attendance matters!
Also FCPS: We take off for holidays you've never even heard of!
This! I think it is rude to call out families for attendance when FCPS has an inconsistent calendar.
I wish I took my kids out more to be honest. But the my are in high school now and it is too hard to miss.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS: Attendance matters!
Also FCPS: We take off for holidays you've never even heard of!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What absolute bs. I hope no one actually listens to them. Don’t forget how they treated school during Covid. It wasn’t important then and we only got 4 days of school for an entire freaking year on a computer! My child’s teacher actually moved out of the area during the school year and was allowed to still be employed by FCPS.
F off, FCPS.
OMG it was FIVE YEARS ago. Get over it and move on past COVID.
Anonymous wrote:What absolute bs. I hope no one actually listens to them. Don’t forget how they treated school during Covid. It wasn’t important then and we only got 4 days of school for an entire freaking year on a computer! My child’s teacher actually moved out of the area during the school year and was allowed to still be employed by FCPS.
F off, FCPS.