Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope whoever is commenting here on not liking the school calendar is NOT voting the same people in to the school board again. I don't like the calendar, and I am NOT voting for any incumbents in the next election.
Amen. Are they finally up for reelection this year? Clean sweep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope whoever is commenting here on not liking the school calendar is NOT voting the same people in to the school board again. I don't like the calendar, and I am NOT voting for any incumbents in the next election.
What real choice do we have? I’m not voting MAGA that’s for sure.
Anonymous wrote:I hope whoever is commenting here on not liking the school calendar is NOT voting the same people in to the school board again. I don't like the calendar, and I am NOT voting for any incumbents in the next election.
Anonymous wrote:I hope whoever is commenting here on not liking the school calendar is NOT voting the same people in to the school board again. I don't like the calendar, and I am NOT voting for any incumbents in the next election.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early August start and late June closing. FCPS is clueless.
Trying to please all the political groups with the holidays. Unfortunately, will religious holidays outweigh some of the other decisions that SB has made?
Anonymous wrote:Early August start and late June closing. FCPS is clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Early August start and late June closing. FCPS is clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Boo! Terrible calendar and we are locked in for how many years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m loving the simplicity of National Presbyterian’s calendar! Wow!
https://resources.finalsite.net/images/v1672929300/nps/p4j14aia0vs3orqcmpu5/2023-2024NPSMajorDatesCalendar.pdf
It’s a lot easier when you are a religious school and don’t have to accommodate more than one religion’s holidays.
The public school shouldn't be accommodating any religious holidays. And before someone drags up Christmas, it's far more than than a religious holiday in the US.
So you think we should accommodate only Christian religious holidays?
DP. I don’t think they should accommodate any religious holidays. I don’t care if they want to have school on Christmas, but the fact is that most other businesses take the day off (and it happens to be a federal holiday) so it will be hard to get anyone to come in on that day.
I'll just note for the crowd that Christmas isn't even a school holiday. Winter Break covers that week, but Christmas itself isn't celebrated.
The Jewish and Muslim holidays are explicitly religious holidays and should not be celebrated by the public school.
I'm fine with chalking up Xmas / Winter break for that reason but I think they should get rid of all religious holidays and stop pegging spring break to easter.
I grew up in the Bible Belt. Our spring holiday was not tied to Easter.
Same. Spring break should be tied to quarter end, PERIOD.
I agree with this, but the reason they tie it to Easter is to match up with surrounding counties which also tie to Easter. The teachers overwhelmingly wanted this because a lot teach in one district but have children in a different district. So if FCPS, Loudon, Arlington, ACPS all broke from Easter I think it would be supported. But I'm guessing we don't all end 3rd quarter at the same time.
My spouse is actually a teacher (career switcher) - and I said - you have to teach in FCPS so you have the same school calendar as our kids. So those people can cry me a river, LOL.
“Those people” represent about 40% of the teaching staff.
And some of that 40% are people who live outside of Fairfax county because they can’t afford to live where they work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Random days off during a school year disrupt learning less than a longer summer.
No. As a teacher, those random days break into routine and instruction. Sure, there is learning loss in the summer, but to have loss you must first have gain. It is really hard to make progress when there are constant interruptions.
It is astounding how parents and the school board just do not grasp the importance of listening to teachers. Many teachers dislike the new calendar due to all the disruptions and the fact that it shortens summer by a week. There is no substitute for being done with a school year. Random days off are not as restorative as a longer summer. We are losing teachers left and right and instead of listening to them we are making the job increasingly less desirable.
And yea I know there are like two teachers here who say they like the new calendar blah blah blah. You are very much in the minority and you know it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Random days off during a school year disrupt learning less than a longer summer.
No. As a teacher, those random days break into routine and instruction. Sure, there is learning loss in the summer, but to have loss you must first have gain. It is really hard to make progress when there are constant interruptions.
It is astounding how parents and the school board just do not grasp the importance of listening to teachers. Many teachers dislike the new calendar due to all the disruptions and the fact that it shortens summer by a week. There is no substitute for being done with a school year. Random days off are not as restorative as a longer summer. We are losing teachers left and right and instead of listening to them we are making the job increasingly less desirable.
And yea I know there are like two teachers here who say they like the new calendar blah blah blah. You are very much in the minority and you know it.