Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're crazy for asking for a bus schedule since spring for next year's school year! If you needed to know that early, ask a neighbor. And if you don't have a neighbor to ask that, it might tell you something!
If the school can't tell Op what the bus schedule is, yet, why do you think that "the neighbor" knows?
Neighbors will know approximately when the SH and MS came last year. The HS time is the best bet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're crazy for asking for a bus schedule since spring for next year's school year! If you needed to know that early, ask a neighbor. And if you don't have a neighbor to ask that, it might tell you something!
If the school can't tell Op what the bus schedule is, yet, why do you think that "the neighbor" knows?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're crazy for asking for a bus schedule since spring for next year's school year! If you needed to know that early, ask a neighbor. And if you don't have a neighbor to ask that, it might tell you something!
Anonymous wrote:Yes, as the others have said, this is not a school issue. The bus schedules are developed/provided by the Transportation Office, and the schools have little-to-no control. Getting frustrated with the school or repeatedly calling/visiting the school to get a bus schedule isn't going to help you get the information any faster. The schedule will be available when it is available.
FCPS is a huge system and individual schools do not have control over all elements of how they are run. Bus schedules is just one example of that. Therefore, please don't get frustrated with the school or its staff; they can't do anything to fix the "issue."
Anonymous wrote:School closes all summer, so everything gets done last minute. Plain and simple. If school was year-round, bus schedules would be out months in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child rides a handicapped bus to a special ed program. The bus driver usually calls us sometime the Sunday or Monday before school starts. It is maddening b/c I am juggling two other school schedules (and no bus for either of the other two) and I absolutely have to be home for dropoff and pickup. So I get the frustration with the bus schedules. It is hard to juggle several kids trying to go several places and parents' work schedules.
Yes, but OP is talking about a non special needs seventh grader riding the same bus as the majority of the other kids in the neighborhood.
OP, on a side note, for your kid's sake please don't take him to the bus stop unless it is raining that day. Let him walk the whole way by himself. No one, I mean no one, will have their mommy with them that morning.
The MS bus stop is where you start making the break to let your kid become independent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child rides a handicapped bus to a special ed program. The bus driver usually calls us sometime the Sunday or Monday before school starts. It is maddening b/c I am juggling two other school schedules (and no bus for either of the other two) and I absolutely have to be home for dropoff and pickup. So I get the frustration with the bus schedules. It is hard to juggle several kids trying to go several places and parents' work schedules.
Yes, but OP is talking about a non special needs seventh grader riding the same bus as the majority of the other kids in the neighborhood.
OP, on a side note, for your kid's sake please don't take him to the bus stop unless it is raining that day. Let him walk the whole way by himself. No one, I mean no one, will have their mommy with them that morning.
The MS bus stop is where you start making the break to let your kid become independent.
Elementary age kids walk to the bus stop in my neighborhood. Are there places where people are still walking their 4th, 5th and 6th graders to the bus stop?![]()
Yes. We walk our older ES kids to bus stop and chat with the other moms. It's a social thing. Eome communities stil have SAHMs, not every place is DIWK
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child rides a handicapped bus to a special ed program. The bus driver usually calls us sometime the Sunday or Monday before school starts. It is maddening b/c I am juggling two other school schedules (and no bus for either of the other two) and I absolutely have to be home for dropoff and pickup. So I get the frustration with the bus schedules. It is hard to juggle several kids trying to go several places and parents' work schedules.
Yes, but OP is talking about a non special needs seventh grader riding the same bus as the majority of the other kids in the neighborhood.
OP, on a side note, for your kid's sake please don't take him to the bus stop unless it is raining that day. Let him walk the whole way by himself. No one, I mean no one, will have their mommy with them that morning.
The MS bus stop is where you start making the break to let your kid become independent.
Elementary age kids walk to the bus stop in my neighborhood. Are there places where people are still walking their 4th, 5th and 6th graders to the bus stop?![]()