Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, 10 PD days in late August is a joke of a proposal. And what, no PD during the rest of the year? By day 3 of consecutive PD, everyone is overloaded and nothing is going to stick.
Does any industry or profession expect their professionals to take all their PD in 2 straight weeks? No, Continuing Education is most effective in small doses at regular intervals.
Comment to have the PD through the year, please!! It's helpful to us to have days to reflect and think. Without that reflection and planning, lessons are going to be less effective and tailored to your child and his/her classmates.
No every other profession requires people to do professional development on their own time when they are not being paid. Stop your whining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the short Christmas break! I hope that stays put.
+100
We don't like to travel then - too expensive and too many other things going on but having the kids home when the weather isn't good (usually) is just a pain - I'd rather summer was longer or spring break!
And I like a later spring break - easier to travel as things are cheaper and more places are warmer!
But 10 1/2 days for PD - please!!!
Anonymous wrote:Also worth to note Parent/Teacher Conferences are now scheduled for Fridays instead of Mondays. Thoughts on that?
Anonymous wrote:I love the short Christmas break! I hope that stays put.
Anonymous wrote:10 days of professional development is a lot. I thinks it's great that teachers get it and I hope they are useful. I come from a place where I'lm lucky if I get sent to one local day conference once a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, 10 PD days in late August is a joke of a proposal. And what, no PD during the rest of the year? By day 3 of consecutive PD, everyone is overloaded and nothing is going to stick.
Does any industry or profession expect their professionals to take all their PD in 2 straight weeks? No, Continuing Education is most effective in small doses at regular intervals.
Comment to have the PD through the year, please!! It's helpful to us to have days to reflect and think. Without that reflection and planning, lessons are going to be less effective and tailored to your child and his/her classmates.
No every other profession requires people to do professional development on their own time when they are not being paid. Stop your whining.
I would have said 'most' not every but agree with PP on this one.
Anonymous wrote:why are they so into changing everything all the time? why not stick to a schedule long-term?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 10 half days is a non-starter for us. Strongly opposed. 1/2 days are just more days where parents either have to take off work or make complicated arrangements. Having more of them is a huge pain.
Also, I think the DCPS survey is incorrect. The "follow up question" on Option C (the 10 1/2 days) talks about how the school year will need to be COMPRESSED as a result. But taking 10 1/2 days instead of 5 1/2 days should result in the school year being LENGTHENED. So we need an extra week of school rather a week less. Hopefully it is just a mistake for the survey rather than a major mistake in DCPS planning.
I think it's that 1/2 days count as full days. Ten 1/2 days instead of 5 full PD days means we'd have an extra 5 "teaching" days in the school calendar that weren't there before. WTU only allows for 196 days for teachers in a year. So there can't be 201 days of school, they'd have to take away 5 other (full) days to be back to 196.
Anonymous wrote:The 10 half days is a non-starter for us. Strongly opposed. 1/2 days are just more days where parents either have to take off work or make complicated arrangements. Having more of them is a huge pain.
Also, I think the DCPS survey is incorrect. The "follow up question" on Option C (the 10 1/2 days) talks about how the school year will need to be COMPRESSED as a result. But taking 10 1/2 days instead of 5 1/2 days should result in the school year being LENGTHENED. So we need an extra week of school rather a week less. Hopefully it is just a mistake for the survey rather than a major mistake in DCPS planning.