Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything the above poster said is true. Especially for HS students, AP's are long done and by adding those days onto June, nothing is accomplished...I hate to say that virutal may be the way to go in the future. I get "let kids have a snow day", but when extended or prolonged, virtual may be the only way to go.
My NY friend says that for this snow storm, the first day was a snow day, and then every student was expected to be online the second day (except for really little kids maybe). They just used the virtual learning set up they have from COVID and kids are expected to have their school laptops at home.
For a school district that is so dependent on Chromebooks, I'm surprised there's been no talk about using them...even if the elementary school younger years don't have them.
They broke the Chromebooks and we don’t have the money to replace them.
Parents argued they were so addictive and dangerous that we shouldn’t use them every day.
Funny. My kid and all his classmates have their Chromebooks at home. My kid even broke out IXL today without any in asking him to do so, and worked on math. This is a lot of wasted time that McPS should have planned to use more intelligently like other school districts did. It’s not like this snowstorm was unexpected.
Anonymous wrote:Snow days are a great excuse to skip more content and never make up for it. Last June we had two half days to make up for 2-3 full snow days where kids just played around, and yet my ES kid did not cover a whole unit of instruction, ironically US History. And if I go and complain to the principal, room teacher or MCPS that the curriculum is not followed thoroughly, I will be crazy bigot. How do I dare to care for my kids education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything the above poster said is true. Especially for HS students, AP's are long done and by adding those days onto June, nothing is accomplished...I hate to say that virutal may be the way to go in the future. I get "let kids have a snow day", but when extended or prolonged, virtual may be the only way to go.
My NY friend says that for this snow storm, the first day was a snow day, and then every student was expected to be online the second day (except for really little kids maybe). They just used the virtual learning set up they have from COVID and kids are expected to have their school laptops at home.
For a school district that is so dependent on Chromebooks, I'm surprised there's been no talk about using them...even if the elementary school younger years don't have them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used to have 184 days scheduled, with additional days at the end as snow days. Most years we only used one or two, and everyone wished school ended sooner (hated the 2days the following week pattern.) The couple of times we had huge storms, it was a state emergency and they waived making up extra days beyond the 4.
Then came Hogan and his mandate that schools start after Labor Day and end by 6/15. Some years it barely fit and end of quarter grading became half days, pd became half days. As part of that process they dropped extra days not mandated by law and got creative around where to put makeup days. After the assembly made a law giving start date decisions back to school systems and we were post pandemic, they never went back, partly because climate change has really switched weather patterns and partly because it’s less expensive to not open the buildings unnecessarily.
Hogan and his Eastern shore tourism priorities are long gone. Just start school a week earlier in August. It’s good for kids in AP classes to get that extra week in before May exams.
I agree, but unfortunately I doubt people in this county are willing to tolerate starting a little earlier in August. Did you hear how much people complained about starting one whole day earlier this year than last year? Now imagine if someone told them school had to start on-- *gasp*-- August 20th? The horror!
I don't see any evidence for that. Most parents in MCPS can't take off 9 weeks of holidays from their jobs. Maybe the summer camp lobby complains, and maybe the MCPS teachers complain, but not the parents.
+1. This is not something most parents would complain about. A lot of Virginia already starts earlier than MCPS.
But on a different thread a teacher said “if you want to take away one of my 9 weeks of summer holiday, you better pay me more.” The teachers are better with this fiction that there’s only one snow day a year in MoCo because then there aren’t 180 days of actual teaching time built into the calendar.
I seriously doubt that was a real MCPS teacher. The most we ever get is 8 weeks between our last duty day and the first.
Teachers work more than 180 days, but we have no control over how many of those 180 are available for instruction. This year, we lost a day to transition. My school does testing and state-mandated surveys in a time-inefficient way because we don’t have enough staff for the number of students with extended time and small testing group accommodations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything the above poster said is true. Especially for HS students, AP's are long done and by adding those days onto June, nothing is accomplished...I hate to say that virutal may be the way to go in the future. I get "let kids have a snow day", but when extended or prolonged, virtual may be the only way to go.
My NY friend says that for this snow storm, the first day was a snow day, and then every student was expected to be online the second day (except for really little kids maybe). They just used the virtual learning set up they have from COVID and kids are expected to have their school laptops at home.
For a school district that is so dependent on Chromebooks, I'm surprised there's been no talk about using them...even if the elementary school younger years don't have them.
They broke the Chromebooks and we don’t have the money to replace them.
Parents argued they were so addictive and dangerous that we shouldn’t use them every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used to have 184 days scheduled, with additional days at the end as snow days. Most years we only used one or two, and everyone wished school ended sooner (hated the 2days the following week pattern.) The couple of times we had huge storms, it was a state emergency and they waived making up extra days beyond the 4.
Then came Hogan and his mandate that schools start after Labor Day and end by 6/15. Some years it barely fit and end of quarter grading became half days, pd became half days. As part of that process they dropped extra days not mandated by law and got creative around where to put makeup days. After the assembly made a law giving start date decisions back to school systems and we were post pandemic, they never went back, partly because climate change has really switched weather patterns and partly because it’s less expensive to not open the buildings unnecessarily.
Hogan and his Eastern shore tourism priorities are long gone. Just start school a week earlier in August. It’s good for kids in AP classes to get that extra week in before May exams.
I agree, but unfortunately I doubt people in this county are willing to tolerate starting a little earlier in August. Did you hear how much people complained about starting one whole day earlier this year than last year? Now imagine if someone told them school had to start on-- *gasp*-- August 20th? The horror!
I don't see any evidence for that. Most parents in MCPS can't take off 9 weeks of holidays from their jobs. Maybe the summer camp lobby complains, and maybe the MCPS teachers complain, but not the parents.
+1. This is not something most parents would complain about. A lot of Virginia already starts earlier than MCPS.
But on a different thread a teacher said “if you want to take away one of my 9 weeks of summer holiday, you better pay me more.” The teachers are better with this fiction that there’s only one snow day a year in MoCo because then there aren’t 180 days of actual teaching time built into the calendar.
Anonymous wrote:I really hope Taylor and the BOE learned something from last year's make up days. Total waste of time.... grades were still due the Friday before and all it was were scavenger hunts and movies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything the above poster said is true. Especially for HS students, AP's are long done and by adding those days onto June, nothing is accomplished...I hate to say that virutal may be the way to go in the future. I get "let kids have a snow day", but when extended or prolonged, virtual may be the only way to go.
My NY friend says that for this snow storm, the first day was a snow day, and then every student was expected to be online the second day (except for really little kids maybe). They just used the virtual learning set up they have from COVID and kids are expected to have their school laptops at home.
For a school district that is so dependent on Chromebooks, I'm surprised there's been no talk about using them...even if the elementary school younger years don't have them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last year, one of the makeup days wasn’t used because it was Eid. In fact, none of the makeup days were used. Instead, we went later into June. This makes no sense.
Those days in June were also coded as make-up days
Anonymous wrote:Everything the above poster said is true. Especially for HS students, AP's are long done and by adding those days onto June, nothing is accomplished...I hate to say that virutal may be the way to go in the future. I get "let kids have a snow day", but when extended or prolonged, virtual may be the only way to go.
They meant none of the in-year makeup days were used only the useless ones at the end of the year. Also last year had 2 freebies instead of 1 so 4 cancelations this year would possibly mean 3 days instead of 2. So even if March 20 and April 15 are used, they'd have to use June 18.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last year, one of the makeup days wasn’t used because it was Eid. In fact, none of the makeup days were used. Instead, we went later into June. This makes no sense.
Those days in June were also coded as make-up days