Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in nursing school up in Boston and although we have no school today, I'm still scheduled for a test tomorrow morning at 8am and one Wednesday morning. We are just starting to get hit with more severe winds and rain.
I guess i don't find it that abnormal because I remember being in middle school and high school here and was always expected to complete assignments and tests on time even when we had snow days. The only exception was a paper if power was lost and our papers were on our computers.
Now your son has extra time to work on his assignments. Unless he saved all the work until the last minute, he shouldn't have to spend all day on them. And if he did procrastinate, imagine what it would be like if he'd had school today and then had to get all the work done.
This confirms for me that most people on here are not actually D.C. urban moms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in nursing school up in Boston and although we have no school today, I'm still scheduled for a test tomorrow morning at 8am and one Wednesday morning. We are just starting to get hit with more severe winds and rain.
I guess i don't find it that abnormal because I remember being in middle school and high school here and was always expected to complete assignments and tests on time even when we had snow days. The only exception was a paper if power was lost and our papers were on our computers.
Now your son has extra time to work on his assignments. Unless he saved all the work until the last minute, he shouldn't have to spend all day on them. And if he did procrastinate, imagine what it would be like if he'd had school today and then had to get all the work done.
This confirms for me that most people on here are not actually D.C. urban moms.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in nursing school up in Boston and although we have no school today, I'm still scheduled for a test tomorrow morning at 8am and one Wednesday morning. We are just starting to get hit with more severe winds and rain.
I guess i don't find it that abnormal because I remember being in middle school and high school here and was always expected to complete assignments and tests on time even when we had snow days. The only exception was a paper if power was lost and our papers were on our computers.
Now your son has extra time to work on his assignments. Unless he saved all the work until the last minute, he shouldn't have to spend all day on them. And if he did procrastinate, imagine what it would be like if he'd had school today and then had to get all the work done.
Anonymous wrote:Sadly, OP, you now have the r.e.a.l reason the kids in MoCo are stressed out, neurotic head cases. It's the parents. So many parents here thinking that there's no reason that an epic, historic storm should slow down the competitive-academic steamroller. Welcome to MoCo.
Anonymous wrote:Still OP you have not answered my question- was this stuff originally due on Monday? If so, then I see no reason why your child can't hand it in Weds. The storm didn't pick up until Monday afternoon, and it should have been READY TO GO on Sunday night.
Signed,
MoCo high school teacher curious to see if her students turn in tomorrow their (small) project that was supposed to be due on Monday
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. To those of you with the hardline approach, I don't get it. I work at a college and we are completely shut down today and tomorrow. Even the law school is shut down and has canceled classes. Don't most of the adults get off work when there's a storm like this? Sure, there are certain obligations that must be met in life, and I certainly agree we must prepare our kids to face that. All I'm asking for is some reason and balance. Sadly, this isn't easy to come by in many schools these days.
For those who are suggesting I've pressured my DC to be in these AP classes, you would be incorrect. He puts the pressure on himself to do well. I know he'll do what he needs to do to be successful. I don't think that's the point. This isn't necessary. It's pressure for pressure's sake, and who really needs that?
I know not eveyone will agree with me, but I know there are plenty of parents out there who understand.
So my DC has had several emails last night and this morning from his high school teachers stating that various projects and tests are still due on Wednesday before the marking period ends, even if we all lose power. WTH? I think this is a bit ridiculous. I don't care if these are AP or Honors classes, and I know the marking period ends, which increases the sense of urgency to get the grades in. These kids aren't emergency personnel and they aren't brain surgeons. Would it kill MCPS to extend these deadlines if in fact this storm is as bad a expected and we all lose power?
Honestly, the pressures on kids these days has gotten out of control! (VENT OVER)