Anonymous wrote:ick. DPR and other camps better get in alignment now. otherwise that's a loooooong August to have to arrange childcare coverage
Anonymous wrote:GREAT. They need to eliminate the completely pointless week in Feb and give them a longer summer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
I'm a former DCPS parent, and my kid's current private has Feb. and April breaks--actually, the April break is two weeks. I haven't heard that these breaks impact academics (although yes, can see the case for summer slide with a 2-3 month break, particularly for kids that are struggling).
Private school student populations are different than public school populations. Same for class sizes.
Fair point, but I just don't see any evidence that a week off will irreparably set kids back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
I'm a former DCPS parent, and my kid's current private has Feb. and April breaks--actually, the April break is two weeks. I haven't heard that these breaks impact academics (although yes, can see the case for summer slide with a 2-3 month break, particularly for kids that are struggling).
Private school student populations are different than public school populations. Same for class sizes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
These breaks were happening before, just at different times. It all works out at the end. I think it just depends on if you prefer more 3/4 day weekends or an extra full week off.
It ends up even by June, but for high school students you need to maximize instructional time between Aug and April. If you're going to keep a Feb break, the start date matters and should probably be earlier than 8/31.
In 2018-19, school started on 8/20. Through April students had 150 instructional days.
In 2019-20 school started on 8/26. Through April students had 146 instructional days.
Both years there was a Feb break. But the start date "cost" a week of instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
These breaks were happening before, just at different times. It all works out at the end. I think it just depends on if you prefer more 3/4 day weekends or an extra full week off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they will drop the Feb. break with this late start.
I pray they don’t. This is our Christmas and Spring break vacationing time.
Agree. We love the Feb break.
NP. I don't think we should have both. Either Feb or Spring break. I'm a high school parent. The more breaks before May 1 is detrimental to students who are taking AP classes and exams; those exams are the first week of May. Pushing 10 hours of instruction past the tests makes little sense.
For younger students, especially for those who are below grade level, it probably affects PARCC scores as well.
I'm a former DCPS parent, and my kid's current private has Feb. and April breaks--actually, the April break is two weeks. I haven't heard that these breaks impact academics (although yes, can see the case for summer slide with a 2-3 month break, particularly for kids that are struggling).