Anonymous wrote:So masks still required for summer school, even vaccinated people. That’s mask guidance effective June 18 by governor.
Wonder if that will change prior to fall start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They said that 5500 students transferred out of the district to homeschool/private school (half homeschool and 1/4 regular private and 1/4 parochial) and 1400 have re-enrolled.
It's less than I thought had transferred and less than I thought would return.
Those numbers do not sound accurate at all since the number was over 13,000 mid year and the board of supervisor number was closer to 30,000.
Sounds like Gatehouse is cooking the books.
There was no mention of how many students left for other public schools. Some people moved to areas where school was in person and some moved out of this area for cheaper areas due to increased teleworking options.
Also at least a few thousand of the 13000 were because there were fewer registered kindergarteners than expected. I'm not sure how or if they were counted for something like the table because some never registered and they may not be considered to have left if they were registered and then pulled before the start of the year.
+1 my friends moved in with their family in the NYC area which had 5 days a week all year for ES kids. There is no way to adequately capture this number. There are people who were “enrolled” for early elementary, K/1, but attended only the bare minimum on the computer all year until the kids could go back in person. There are people with kids in K last school year, or people new to FCPS, who never enrolled. I think the number is A LOT larger than they are letting on.
7 out of the 21 families on our street pulled at least one or more of their kids from fcps to homeschool or switch to private school.
16 kids on my street alone left fcps this past year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100
I wish they would bring back half-day Mondays. It was a win-win for teachers and students. No random and arbitrary teacher workdays scattered on the calendar bc the half-day Mondays allowed time for development and planning. And parents liked it bc it was consistent and manageable. And us students liked it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100
I wish they would bring back half-day Mondays. It was a win-win for teachers and students. No random and arbitrary teacher workdays scattered on the calendar bc the half-day Mondays allowed time for development and planning. And parents liked it bc it was consistent and manageable. And us students liked it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100
I wish they would bring back half-day Mondays. It was a win-win for teachers and students. No random and arbitrary teacher workdays scattered on the calendar bc the half-day Mondays allowed time for development and planning. And parents liked it bc it was consistent and manageable. And us students liked it.
That was only ever for ES...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100
I wish they would bring back half-day Mondays. It was a win-win for teachers and students. No random and arbitrary teacher workdays scattered on the calendar bc the half-day Mondays allowed time for development and planning. And parents liked it bc it was consistent and manageable. And us students liked it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100
Anonymous wrote:The number in that slide is only people who started the year enrolled and dropped out. It does not include all the people who weren’t enrolled for 2020-2021 to begin with. I know 2 families who quit mid-year. I know many more who were new to homeschool or private from the start of the year. Most are not coming back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They said that 5500 students transferred out of the district to homeschool/private school (half homeschool and 1/4 regular private and 1/4 parochial) and 1400 have re-enrolled.
It's less than I thought had transferred and less than I thought would return.
Those numbers do not sound accurate at all since the number was over 13,000 mid year and the board of supervisor number was closer to 30,000.
Sounds like Gatehouse is cooking the books.
There was no mention of how many students left for other public schools. Some people moved to areas where school was in person and some moved out of this area for cheaper areas due to increased teleworking options.
Also at least a few thousand of the 13000 were because there were fewer registered kindergarteners than expected. I'm not sure how or if they were counted for something like the table because some never registered and they may not be considered to have left if they were registered and then pulled before the start of the year.
+1 my friends moved in with their family in the NYC area which had 5 days a week all year for ES kids. There is no way to adequately capture this number. There are people who were “enrolled” for early elementary, K/1, but attended only the bare minimum on the computer all year until the kids could go back in person. There are people with kids in K last school year, or people new to FCPS, who never enrolled. I think the number is A LOT larger than they are letting on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They said that 5500 students transferred out of the district to homeschool/private school (half homeschool and 1/4 regular private and 1/4 parochial) and 1400 have re-enrolled.
It's less than I thought had transferred and less than I thought would return.
Those numbers do not sound accurate at all since the number was over 13,000 mid year and the board of supervisor number was closer to 30,000.
Sounds like Gatehouse is cooking the books.
There was no mention of how many students left for other public schools. Some people moved to areas where school was in person and some moved out of this area for cheaper areas due to increased teleworking options.
Also at least a few thousand of the 13000 were because there were fewer registered kindergarteners than expected. I'm not sure how or if they were counted for something like the table because some never registered and they may not be considered to have left if they were registered and then pulled before the start of the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for HS I hope for Asch Mondays, I think that gives a day to catch up on work, study for tests, doc appointments etc
+100