Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you seen some of these roads?! What did folks think was going to be happening today....academic learning? It's already a delayed ooening. The day was for students to see their peers after a week if they didn't see them during sledding in the neighborhood or online playing games; release social energy annoying teachers; feed students; get meals to FarmS before a closure tomorrow; teachers who were able to make it in to assign work; go over expectations for half year classes. Etc.
My kid's three AP teachers have been sending out increasingly agitated emails about needing to finish the curriculum before AP exams in May. There will definitely be intensive instruction today, despite the shortened day.
There is a whole world of school outside of elementary, PP.
Here is that AP class / exam poster again. They found this thread, too. Sigh.
Signed poster who has been there done that with AP classes and exams
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you seen some of these roads?! What did folks think was going to be happening today....academic learning? It's already a delayed ooening. The day was for students to see their peers after a week if they didn't see them during sledding in the neighborhood or online playing games; release social energy annoying teachers; feed students; get meals to FarmS before a closure tomorrow; teachers who were able to make it in to assign work; go over expectations for half year classes. Etc.
My kid's three AP teachers have been sending out increasingly agitated emails about needing to finish the curriculum before AP exams in May. There will definitely be intensive instruction today, despite the shortened day.
There is a whole world of school outside of elementary, PP.
Here is that AP class / exam poster again. They found this thread, too. Sigh.
Signed poster who has been there done that with AP classes and exams
And yet... your post was not useful in the least, whereas the PP's actually added to the discussion that there would definitely be instruction today, at least for certain high school classes.
I don't know why you're so rabidly against people pointing out that kids are having real classes. That's odd.
No. They are NOT having real classes.maybe next week. Stfu.
Anonymous wrote:The AP Bio teacher at my school gave a test today. The AP poster isn’t wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Several homeowners did not shovel sidewalks, thus forcing elementary school kids out into the roughly plowed roads to walk to the bus stop. I'm pretty annoyed at the selfishness of these homeowners.
You mean what some of our kids do every day, walk to school in the streets, let alone snow...Drive your kids
Anonymous wrote:Several homeowners did not shovel sidewalks, thus forcing elementary school kids out into the roughly plowed roads to walk to the bus stop. I'm pretty annoyed at the selfishness of these homeowners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you seen some of these roads?! What did folks think was going to be happening today....academic learning? It's already a delayed ooening. The day was for students to see their peers after a week if they didn't see them during sledding in the neighborhood or online playing games; release social energy annoying teachers; feed students; get meals to FarmS before a closure tomorrow; teachers who were able to make it in to assign work; go over expectations for half year classes. Etc.
My kid's three AP teachers have been sending out increasingly agitated emails about needing to finish the curriculum before AP exams in May. There will definitely be intensive instruction today, despite the shortened day.
There is a whole world of school outside of elementary, PP.
+1. Some of my kids’ teachers were quietly trying to assign reading last week even though they weren’t supposed to. It never seems to amaze me that some people on the forum think that their experience is the only one that occurs.
I walked one kid to school. Plenty of ice on certain unshoveled sidewalks but it was fine. The kids I saw at drop off were smilier than normal and happy to get back.
Didn’t receive any emails from my bus riding kid’s school that Bus X or Bus Y was late, so sounds like it was as smooth as could be expected.
AP is not the end all be all. Some parents should let their kids figure it out by now. If they can't, maybe kid shouldnt be taking AP.
Anonymous wrote:Several homeowners did not shovel sidewalks, thus forcing elementary school kids out into the roughly plowed roads to walk to the bus stop. I'm pretty annoyed at the selfishness of these homeowners.