Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids teachers are absent a lot too. I don't get it. I have taken a few days off this winter when i had the flu but that is it.
Teachers already get winter and summer break. Why are they constantly taking so many random days off.
My HS kid's English teacher took one week off a few weeks ago and then another one week off last week. As it is they are barely learning anything with this teacher but then they keep ending up with substitutes. Other teachers also say they are not coming in as they need to stay home due to home repair, etc. I actually respect teachers a lot and feel they get blamed for a lot unfairly but they need to stop with the constant days off.
Ten month teachers get 96 hours (12 days) of sick leave per year, 4 days of which can be used for general leave. Unused sick leave carries over. It's in the Collective Bargaining Agreement.
http://www.wtulocal6.org/usr/2017/pdf/contract.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:corruption in construction contracts
That's the easiest one to prove if you can get someone knowledgeable to talk about it. The cost differences between DCPS/DGS projects and similar projects by charters are ridiculous- DCPS at least twice as much for similar buildings, sometimes 3 times as much. And the charters still have to abide by some of the hiring standards like hiring a certain percentage of DC residents and DC businesses.
My recollection is that Latin spent $17 million for a gut-rehab of the old Rudolph school. Compare that to the $200 million spent on Ellington, or even some of the less outrageous DCPS projects, and you wonder what is going on. Also compare to the $40 million that GDS is reportedly asking for their lower campus and you have to wonder.
What is there to wonder about? Developers (who happen to be Bowser donors) underbid and win the deal. They then under-deliver, have cost overruns, and the taxpayers get bilked for hundreds of millions. There's no political fallout, because they all support the Mayor and graft is the lifeblood of this one-party town. Vote Democrat and vote for the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:corruption in construction contracts
That's the easiest one to prove if you can get someone knowledgeable to talk about it. The cost differences between DCPS/DGS projects and similar projects by charters are ridiculous- DCPS at least twice as much for similar buildings, sometimes 3 times as much. And the charters still have to abide by some of the hiring standards like hiring a certain percentage of DC residents and DC businesses.
My recollection is that Latin spent $17 million for a gut-rehab of the old Rudolph school. Compare that to the $200 million spent on Ellington, or even some of the less outrageous DCPS projects, and you wonder what is going on. Also compare to the $40 million that GDS is reportedly asking for their lower campus and you have to wonder.
Anonymous wrote:Grades are being inflated for children of HHI white parents in order to increase chances of college acceptance- the WOTP grade scandal.
Anonymous wrote:My kids teachers are absent a lot too. I don't get it. I have taken a few days off this winter when i had the flu but that is it.
Teachers already get winter and summer break. Why are they constantly taking so many random days off.
My HS kid's English teacher took one week off a few weeks ago and then another one week off last week. As it is they are barely learning anything with this teacher but then they keep ending up with substitutes. Other teachers also say they are not coming in as they need to stay home due to home repair, etc. I actually respect teachers a lot and feel they get blamed for a lot unfairly but they need to stop with the constant days off.
Anonymous wrote:Grades are being inflated for children of HHI white parents in order to increase chances of college acceptance- the WOTP grade scandal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am convinced that DCPS has a very serious chronic absenteeism problem among its teaching staff. I think OSSE and Central Office should be looking at this and if they determine there are serious teacher absenteeism problems (and I KNOW there are) examine why. Is it a morale issue? Are some teachers just burnt out and don't care? Are some administrators just ridiculous pushovers and don't make expectations clear?
Here's a study that got me thinking about all of this along with a related article:
Here’s the study:
https://edexcellence.net/publications/teacher-absenteeism
Article about the study:
https://www.the74million.org/article/new-study-finds-chronic-teacher-absences-three-times-likelier-in-district-schools-than-charters/
I don't doubt the chronic absenteeism possibility. My child's teacher a couple of years back was absent A LOT--most of it was legit and was medically-related, but occasionally her reasons was suspect. Once since I was class parent she let me know that she was going home early that Wednesday--she said she wasn't feeling well and wasn't sure why (although description was a little suspicious). She also said she wouldn't be able to make it in on Thursday and Friday. This was right before spring break.
Anonymous wrote:I am convinced that DCPS has a very serious chronic absenteeism problem among its teaching staff. I think OSSE and Central Office should be looking at this and if they determine there are serious teacher absenteeism problems (and I KNOW there are) examine why. Is it a morale issue? Are some teachers just burnt out and don't care? Are some administrators just ridiculous pushovers and don't make expectations clear?
Here's a study that got me thinking about all of this along with a related article:
Here’s the study:
https://edexcellence.net/publications/teacher-absenteeism
Article about the study:
https://www.the74million.org/article/new-study-finds-chronic-teacher-absences-three-times-likelier-in-district-schools-than-charters/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:corruption in construction contracts
That's the easiest one to prove if you can get someone knowledgeable to talk about it. The cost differences between DCPS/DGS projects and similar projects by charters are ridiculous- DCPS at least twice as much for similar buildings, sometimes 3 times as much. And the charters still have to abide by some of the hiring standards like hiring a certain percentage of DC residents and DC businesses.
My recollection is that Latin spent $17 million for a gut-rehab of the old Rudolph school. Compare that to the $200 million spent on Ellington, or even some of the less outrageous DCPS projects, and you wonder what is going on. Also compare to the $40 million that GDS is reportedly asking for their lower campus and you have to wonder.
Anonymous wrote:Schools not adhering to the Physical Education requirements.