Transition day is useless so we could have a day back there but there still isn't enough room for a full summer anymore under the current law. As for holidays some people would be upset if they were removed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Murray County GA has the shortest school year in the country! Only 160 days https://core-docs.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/documents/asset/uploaded_file/3460/mcs/5154470/MCS_2025-26_District_Calendar_PDF_aproved_10.7.24_Eng.pdfAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
6 weeks is too short. 8 weeks of summer and 4 weeks of winter break would be the best. We need to switch to what Asian countries do. Winter break at the coldest time Jan to Feb and no need to worry about snow days
Georgia law: a minimum of 180 school days or its equivalent. Minimum number of hours per school day Grades kindergarten-3=4.5; grades 4-5=5.0; grades 6-12=5.5
Equivalent = 810 hours for K-3, 900 hours for 4&5, 990 hours for 6-12.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Update 160 days not 150
Maryland requires 1080 hours for K-8 and 1170 for 9-12 which range from 90 to 270 more hours than Georgia. I'm not complaining about more time in the classroom. It's the lack of freedom towards planning that time, that is hard. I don't expect a year like Murray County with only 160 days but a 170-175 day year depending on bad weather days should be allowed especially if the schools have plenty of hours.
We should not be begging for less instructional days. Instead, get rid of some stupid transition day and holidays
Anonymous wrote:Murray County GA has the shortest school year in the country! Only 150 days https://core-docs.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/documents/asset/uploaded_file/3460/mcs/5154470/MCS_2025-26_District_Calendar_PDF_aproved_10.7.24_Eng.pdfAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
6 weeks is too short. 8 weeks of summer and 4 weeks of winter break would be the best. We need to switch to what Asian countries do. Winter break at the coldest time Jan to Feb and no need to worry about snow days
Georgia law: a minimum of 180 school days or its equivalent. Minimum number of hours per school day Grades kindergarten-3=4.5; grades 4-5=5.0; grades 6-12=5.5
Equivalent = 810 hours for K-3, 900 hours for 4&5, 990 hours for 6-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maryland requires 1080 hours for K-8 and 1170 for 9-12 which range from 90 to 270 more hours than Georgia. I'm not complaining about more time in the classroom. It's the lack of freedom towards planning that time, that is hard. I don't expect a year like Murray County with only 150 days but a 170-175 day year depending on bad weather days should be allowed especially if the schools have plenty of hours.
Murray County GA has the shortest school year in the country! Only 150 days https://core-docs.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/documents/asset/uploaded_file/3460/mcs/5154470/MCS_2025-26_District_Calendar_PDF_aproved_10.7.24_Eng.pdfAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
6 weeks is too short. 8 weeks of summer and 4 weeks of winter break would be the best. We need to switch to what Asian countries do. Winter break at the coldest time Jan to Feb and no need to worry about snow days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
They are starting literally one day earlier than this year, August 25 rather than August 26.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
6 weeks? Lol. Start relying on someone other than schools to provide you with free childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone remember that one year in the 90s(probably 96 because of the Blizzard) where they extended the school day by like 20 minutes every day for the last like 2 months?
That’s actually genius, but I bet the pushback nowadays would be enormous
Besides being ineffective educationally,it doesn't work as an alternative to using make-up days.
It really isn't complicated. We need at least 185 scheduled days.
+1. Or they should create more contingency days Feb-May and actually use them. Otherwise they will simply need to keep extending the school year.
People complain whatever they do. If they use a contingency day, me any kids do not show up and they cannot teach new material.
That would absolutely not be an issue if they use March 20 or April 15. Why would a kid not show up on a random Friday or Wednesday just because it used to be a one-off day off? (Maaaybe some small number of families planned something for the 3-day weekend that included Friday March 20th, but not enough to not teach new material. And making Weds April 15 a school day would be totally indistinguishable from any other school day.).
This. Also where is there a rule that teachers can’t teach new material if a kid doesn’t show up? The PP you responded to is just making stuff up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone remember that one year in the 90s(probably 96 because of the Blizzard) where they extended the school day by like 20 minutes every day for the last like 2 months?
That’s actually genius, but I bet the pushback nowadays would be enormous
Besides being ineffective educationally,it doesn't work as an alternative to using make-up days.
It really isn't complicated. We need at least 185 scheduled days.
+1. Or they should create more contingency days Feb-May and actually use them. Otherwise they will simply need to keep extending the school year.
People complain whatever they do. If they use a contingency day, me any kids do not show up and they cannot teach new material.
That would absolutely not be an issue if they use March 20 or April 15. Why would a kid not show up on a random Friday or Wednesday just because it used to be a one-off day off? (Maaaybe some small number of families planned something for the 3-day weekend that included Friday March 20th, but not enough to not teach new material. And making Weds April 15 a school day would be totally indistinguishable from any other school day.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone remember that one year in the 90s(probably 96 because of the Blizzard) where they extended the school day by like 20 minutes every day for the last like 2 months?
That’s actually genius, but I bet the pushback nowadays would be enormous
Besides being ineffective educationally,it doesn't work as an alternative to using make-up days.
It really isn't complicated. We need at least 185 scheduled days.
+1. Or they should create more contingency days Feb-May and actually use them. Otherwise they will simply need to keep extending the school year.
People complain whatever they do. If they use a contingency day, me any kids do not show up and they cannot teach new material.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone remember that one year in the 90s(probably 96 because of the Blizzard) where they extended the school day by like 20 minutes every day for the last like 2 months?
That’s actually genius, but I bet the pushback nowadays would be enormous
Besides being ineffective educationally,it doesn't work as an alternative to using make-up days.
It really isn't complicated. We need at least 185 scheduled days.
I think it happened in VA not MD
It happened in MoCo. I was in elementary school and we stayed in school until almost 4 PM because of it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should just start earlier. First day of school in mid August, not late. That way, we can keep all of our existing non-instructional days.
Build in 4 snow days at the very end.
August is hot, and they start early enough as they are starting a week earlier next year (2 weeks before Labor Day which never happened before) due to the extra religious holidays.
Starting earlier shortens summer, same with ending later. Nothing accomplished towards saving summer by doing that.
We can fix the AC in schools.
The problem is not shortening summer. 6 weeks is enough. The problem is the uncertainty about make up days.