Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to write your school board members and then you need to engage them where they care which is politics.
All of the schoolboard members are liberal and many are progressive. This calendar is *not* progressive and disproportionately impacts lower-income and dual-working families. Women and hourly workers are supposed to be constituencies democrats care about. So raise the issue with local league of women voters, canvassers/fundraisers who are trying to get support for other democratic candidates (especially if you’ve donated before) and directly ask school board members how they are contributing to the affordability agenda with their calendar choices.
It is idiotic that this is how any of this works. But COVID created the idea for many Democrats that liberals don’t mind keeping kids out of school and now its course correction.
Have you confused school with being child care? You think its primary purpose is to warehouse children?
I think schools exist to provide a public good at public expense. Has taxpayers we have a right to assume the public will be provided efficiently and effectively, and not create undue burdens on the households they are intended to serve.
What undue burdens are they creating? The calendars are published a year in advance. No one can control the weather. There are no burdens, except for maybe people who suck at managing a household. Stop thinking of school as child care. It's not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Your kids get the same amount of instruction they always do. There's a number of hours they have to meet and they meet them.
Your complaints about observing holidays are invalid, as are your feelings. You seem to believe that the purpose of schools is to warehouse kids.
The time to "get the calendar changed" is when the board puts it out for comments. Weigh in then. Whining about it now is a bad look.
DP. Don’t you dare gaslight people trying to act like there was any point at which the public could give meaningful input on the calendar. They put out a completely bullsh*t survey with ridiculous binary choices. They purposely phrased the questions so there was no way to choose a sensible calendar. They wrote the survey with the goal of doing whatever they wanted while pretending they solicited input first. They think we are stupid. I guess a lot of people are because they keep voting for this.
That's just your invalid opinion. I realize you're frustrated that you're in a fringe majority in with your invalid feelings, but it is what is. Stop blaming everyone for your inability to plan based on the information provided to you months in advance.
Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What undue burdens are they creating? The calendars are published a year in advance. No one can control the weather. There are no burdens, except for maybe people who suck at managing a household. Stop thinking of school as child care. It's not.
Actually, the calendars are put out 3 years in advance. If you can't plan for that, then that's on you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't wait till we celebrate the Iranian New Year (Nowruz) on Friday!
Yayyyyy, another day off! Who cares about AP tests!
No, dumdum. It's closed for Eid, because a ton of staff and kids are Muslim.
Anonymous wrote:
What undue burdens are they creating? The calendars are published a year in advance. No one can control the weather. There are no burdens, except for maybe people who suck at managing a household. Stop thinking of school as child care. It's not.
Anonymous wrote:I can't wait till we celebrate the Iranian New Year (Nowruz) on Friday!
Yayyyyy, another day off! Who cares about AP tests!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to write your school board members and then you need to engage them where they care which is politics.
All of the schoolboard members are liberal and many are progressive. This calendar is *not* progressive and disproportionately impacts lower-income and dual-working families. Women and hourly workers are supposed to be constituencies democrats care about. So raise the issue with local league of women voters, canvassers/fundraisers who are trying to get support for other democratic candidates (especially if you’ve donated before) and directly ask school board members how they are contributing to the affordability agenda with their calendar choices.
It is idiotic that this is how any of this works. But COVID created the idea for many Democrats that liberals don’t mind keeping kids out of school and now its course correction.
Have you confused school with being child care? You think its primary purpose is to warehouse children?
I think schools exist to provide a public good at public expense. Has taxpayers we have a right to assume the public will be provided efficiently and effectively, and not create undue burdens on the households they are intended to serve.
What undue burdens are they creating? The calendars are published a year in advance. No one can control the weather. There are no burdens, except for maybe people who suck at managing a household. Stop thinking of school as child care. It's not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Your kids get the same amount of instruction they always do. There's a number of hours they have to meet and they meet them.
Your complaints about observing holidays are invalid, as are your feelings. You seem to believe that the purpose of schools is to warehouse kids.
The time to "get the calendar changed" is when the board puts it out for comments. Weigh in then. Whining about it now is a bad look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Your kids get the same amount of instruction they always do. There's a number of hours they have to meet and they meet them.
Your complaints about observing holidays are invalid, as are your feelings. You seem to believe that the purpose of schools is to warehouse kids.
The time to "get the calendar changed" is when the board puts it out for comments. Weigh in then. Whining about it now is a bad look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone needs to get the Media involved!!!
I hope this is posted to be funny because it made me chuckle. But just in case it isn't because I know how stupid some DCUMs could be, if you haven't noticed, the media reports the school closings, delays, and early dismissals, so I'm pretty sure they are aware of these things.
Clearly you are the stupid one. The media can bring light to the overall effect this is having on families and students. In addition, the media certainly doesn't report all the other routine closures FCPS has nor does it report on how they close for every single religious holiday known to man!
If you're ok, you're not paying attention!
They don't report on those things because it's not news. Schools set their calendars and move along. The news has much bigger issues to report.
I think you’re wrong, the decline of Fairfax is system is news because it used to be among the best in the country.
It is in no one‘s interests for our school to be laughingstock. Most people’s largest asset is their home, and people buy in Fairfax because of the schools. I heard a pretty damning comment at a (private) pre-K orientation event: when asked how the local elementary was a mother shrugged and said it’s fine when it’s open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Your kids get the same amount of instruction they always do. There's a number of hours they have to meet and they meet them.
Your complaints about observing holidays are invalid, as are your feelings. You seem to believe that the purpose of schools is to warehouse kids.
The time to "get the calendar changed" is when the board puts it out for comments. Weigh in then. Whining about it now is a bad look.
DP. Don’t you dare gaslight people trying to act like there was any point at which the public could give meaningful input on the calendar. They put out a completely bullsh*t survey with ridiculous binary choices. They purposely phrased the questions so there was no way to choose a sensible calendar. They wrote the survey with the goal of doing whatever they wanted while pretending they solicited input first. They think we are stupid. I guess a lot of people are because they keep voting for this.
That's just your invalid opinion. I realize you're frustrated that you're in a fringe majority in with your invalid feelings, but it is what is. Stop blaming everyone for your inability to plan based on the information provided to you months in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had it with the FCPS calendar. The days off have gotten totally out off hand. At some point FCPS decided it need to celebrate EVERY possibly , religious and non religious holiday under the sun.
It is out of control.
Throw in all the weather delays and closing and kids are never in school. I know, I know, but they still meet their hours and are above the VA standard. Sure, who cares when it come to elementary, but HS teachers, especially, those teaching AP classes plan their year around having a certain number of days of school, and given that most AP exams are early May they already have a condensed timeline. Elementary parents come back to the conversation with your kid in in HS and school actually matters. Why not have a higher bar and if there aren't weather related closing we get more instruction.
Your kids get the same amount of instruction they always do. There's a number of hours they have to meet and they meet them.
Your complaints about observing holidays are invalid, as are your feelings. You seem to believe that the purpose of schools is to warehouse kids.
The time to "get the calendar changed" is when the board puts it out for comments. Weigh in then. Whining about it now is a bad look.
DP. Don’t you dare gaslight people trying to act like there was any point at which the public could give meaningful input on the calendar. They put out a completely bullsh*t survey with ridiculous binary choices. They purposely phrased the questions so there was no way to choose a sensible calendar. They wrote the survey with the goal of doing whatever they wanted while pretending they solicited input first. They think we are stupid. I guess a lot of people are because they keep voting for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to write your school board members and then you need to engage them where they care which is politics.
All of the schoolboard members are liberal and many are progressive. This calendar is *not* progressive and disproportionately impacts lower-income and dual-working families. Women and hourly workers are supposed to be constituencies democrats care about. So raise the issue with local league of women voters, canvassers/fundraisers who are trying to get support for other democratic candidates (especially if you’ve donated before) and directly ask school board members how they are contributing to the affordability agenda with their calendar choices.
It is idiotic that this is how any of this works. But COVID created the idea for many Democrats that liberals don’t mind keeping kids out of school and now its course correction.
Have you confused school with being child care? You think its primary purpose is to warehouse children?
I think schools exist to provide a public good at public expense. Has taxpayers we have a right to assume the public will be provided efficiently and effectively, and not create undue burdens on the households they are intended to serve.