Anonymous wrote:What most of you don't realize, is that the concerned persons are worried about the PRINCIPLE of "SSL hours", and not about how "easy" they are to acquire.
Quite a few believe that such things are precedent to much greater, much worse requirements to receive something the tax payer has already paid for.
It should be enough these students will eventually compensate the system by providing additional tax income later on in their lives, and adding tacing on meaningless and trivial requirements to show that you have received a public education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not mind a community service or service learning credit requirement but I actually with other posters that there are too many restrictions which make it less meaningful. Its a good point that lower income students need this time for work, or family childcare. We are not religious but many good charities have religious affiliations which knocks them off the list. The SSL requirement doesn't support creative endeavors like kids setting up their own charitable activity so this is lost too.
Not true! My daughter started her own foundation and got over 100 hrs in one school year that way.
Anonymous wrote:Im sorry this is servitude. Forcing children to perform a service or the get no diploma allowing them to proceed to college.... I thought blackmail was against the law?
It does not matter if you deem that service good or bad, the principle of this appalls me.
Anonymous wrote:Im sorry this is servitude. Forcing children to perform a service or the get no diploma allowing them to proceed to college.... I thought blackmail was against the law?
It does not matter if you deem that service good or bad, the principle of this appalls me.
Anonymous wrote:kids graduate without doing homework
ssl hours are faked by MCPS as in school time in schools where kids don't volunteer
ssl program is not evenly applied to all students
ssl not fun, boring, sit around, sweep floors
Anonymous wrote:I would not mind a community service or service learning credit requirement but I actually with other posters that there are too many restrictions which make it less meaningful. Its a good point that lower income students need this time for work, or family childcare. We are not religious but many good charities have religious affiliations which knocks them off the list. The SSL requirement doesn't support creative endeavors like kids setting up their own charitable activity so this is lost too.
Anonymous wrote:How is it legal to require SSL hours in order to graduate from a public school?? I genuinely do not understand how this has not been challenged legally. I disagree so strongly with this program. Don't get me wrong - I think genuine volunteerism is admirable. Forced volunteerism, however, is crass b/c is it not genuine. In addition, what about lower income kids who might need to use out-of-school-time to work, babysit a sibling while mom works, etc.
This program really rubs me the wrong way. It is "state" (in this case the public school system) coercing underage and unpaid work at organizations it deems "worthy." Yuck.
Anonymous wrote:I would not mind a community service or service learning credit requirement but I actually with other posters that there are too many restrictions which make it less meaningful. Its a good point that lower income students need this time for work, or family childcare. We are not religious but many good charities have religious affiliations which knocks them off the list. The SSL requirement doesn't support creative endeavors like kids setting up their own charitable activity so this is lost too.
Anonymous wrote:There is something very dangerous/frightening about so many parents accepting this and defending this practice. Talk about a slippery slope to state control!
What happens when, for example, the list one day only includes groups with a particular religious or political affiliation. Sometimes you need to look at the principal at stake. I can't be the only liberal on this board, can I?