Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel really bad for the teachers. For HS, they got stuck trying to jam everything into a smaller time period and now they will have to come up with something random for the kids to do the last week. Exams and grades are already done at this point so no idea what they will do.
The good ones don't schedule vacation during the school year. They use breaks for vacation. Many teachers in MCPS don't like in Montgomery County. The live up in Frederick and have small kids. Frederick unlike MCPS has made attempts to make up some instructional time so they will probably get a waiver. The teachers with kids in Frederick will have to cancel vacation plans and come up with childcare as their kids will be out of school.
I am glad you feel bad for the teachers. As a teacher myself with a child. I was looking forward to the trips we have planned this summer. I think they could have done something to avoid putting extra days at the end of the school year. However many counties failed to do that. So now one of my trips is being cut or I will take those days off depending on when the last day of school will be.
You were on notice that one of your nine weeks off could be a school week. Doesnt make any sense to plan a trip for that week.
+1000
Now we have entitled teachers. And the comment above about specialist doctors only available one week in June or the end of August is total bullshit. Teachers, administration AND parents knew of the snow make-up policy. There was already 4 days by the end of winter break, yet people still went ahead with camp deposits, vacations and doctor appointments. The school is not to blame, Mother Nature is not to blame, the state denying a waiver is not to blame. You are the only one to blame. You prepared wrong and instead of owning up to it, people either whine/complain around their kids. Say "we won't send our kids to school" or just blow it all off saying it is a wasted week with no learning. What fine examples you are showing your kids.
You're questioning my daughter's specialists and their schedules?
At least I'm home with my kids during the summer and don't HAVE to rely on camps as the great sitter!
Much luck to you, asshole!
Anonymous wrote:Good - they may come back with another plan, like extending the school day. What I found most annoying about the whole thing is that there is a contingency plan in place and MCPS did absolutely nothing to follow it. Now the parents, teachers and students had to suffer while all of this was sorted out, but in the end it was the right decision. Don't state how you are going to handle a situation and not come thru. And don't blame the unique winter. It doesn't matter how or why school is closed, only that it was closed and you noted that those days would be made up.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter's 8th grade health teacher decided to skip the days planned for teaching about contraceptives entirely due to the number of snow days in the quarter. If the days are added on to the rest of the year, I doubt she and her peers will be re-grouped to get the lessons on contraceptives that they missed.
Yes, I can teach this myself, but I'd rather that MCPS have a plan for adding snow days during the school year. Also, isn't there any guidance on what to keep/skip when days are lost? Couldn't they have skipped a couple of days of the many devoted to nutrition and "good decision making" and not the entire contraceptive lesson?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For MCPS to have school on Easter Monday, the state would have to grant a waiver. State law requires schools to close on Easter Monday (and Good Friday too).
The state has already given a waiver to Anne Arundel county and maybe one more school system for attending on Easter Monday. I suspect that MCPS will resubmit a proposal that includes classes on April 21, June 13, June 16-17 and maybe 18 and then ask for a waiver the last 1 (or 2, depending on the status of the 18th).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel really bad for the teachers. For HS, they got stuck trying to jam everything into a smaller time period and now they will have to come up with something random for the kids to do the last week. Exams and grades are already done at this point so no idea what they will do.
The good ones don't schedule vacation during the school year. They use breaks for vacation. Many teachers in MCPS don't like in Montgomery County. The live up in Frederick and have small kids. Frederick unlike MCPS has made attempts to make up some instructional time so they will probably get a waiver. The teachers with kids in Frederick will have to cancel vacation plans and come up with childcare as their kids will be out of school.
I am glad you feel bad for the teachers. As a teacher myself with a child. I was looking forward to the trips we have planned this summer. I think they could have done something to avoid putting extra days at the end of the school year. However many counties failed to do that. So now one of my trips is being cut or I will take those days off depending on when the last day of school will be.
You were on notice that one of your nine weeks off could be a school week. Doesnt make any sense to plan a trip for that week.
+1000
Now we have entitled teachers. And the comment above about specialist doctors only available one week in June or the end of August is total bullshit. Teachers, administration AND parents knew of the snow make-up policy. There was already 4 days by the end of winter break, yet people still went ahead with camp deposits, vacations and doctor appointments. The school is not to blame, Mother Nature is not to blame, the state denying a waiver is not to blame. You are the only one to blame. You prepared wrong and instead of owning up to it, people either whine/complain around their kids. Say "we won't send our kids to school" or just blow it all off saying it is a wasted week with no learning. What fine examples you are showing your kids.
You're questioning my daughter's specialists and their schedules?
At least I'm home with my kids during the summer and don't HAVE to rely on camps as the great sitter!
Much luck to you, asshole!
Anonymous wrote:I bet we won't close schools for cold weather anymore, even if fancy meotorologists name it the "dreaded" polar vortex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel really bad for the teachers. For HS, they got stuck trying to jam everything into a smaller time period and now they will have to come up with something random for the kids to do the last week. Exams and grades are already done at this point so no idea what they will do.
The good ones don't schedule vacation during the school year. They use breaks for vacation. Many teachers in MCPS don't like in Montgomery County. The live up in Frederick and have small kids. Frederick unlike MCPS has made attempts to make up some instructional time so they will probably get a waiver. The teachers with kids in Frederick will have to cancel vacation plans and come up with childcare as their kids will be out of school.
I am glad you feel bad for the teachers. As a teacher myself with a child. I was looking forward to the trips we have planned this summer. I think they could have done something to avoid putting extra days at the end of the school year. However many counties failed to do that. So now one of my trips is being cut or I will take those days off depending on when the last day of school will be.
You were on notice that one of your nine weeks off could be a school week. Doesnt make any sense to plan a trip for that week.
+1000
Now we have entitled teachers. And the comment above about specialist doctors only available one week in June or the end of August is total bullshit. Teachers, administration AND parents knew of the snow make-up policy. There was already 4 days by the end of winter break, yet people still went ahead with camp deposits, vacations and doctor appointments. The school is not to blame, Mother Nature is not to blame, the state denying a waiver is not to blame. You are the only one to blame. You prepared wrong and instead of owning up to it, people either whine/complain around their kids. Say "we won't send our kids to school" or just blow it all off saying it is a wasted week with no learning. What fine examples you are showing your kids.
Anonymous wrote:I bet we won't close schools for cold weather anymore, even if fancy meotorologists name it the "dreaded" polar vortex.
Anonymous wrote:My concern with the lengethened school year has nothing to do with the plans (which I responsibly made since I can't take a chance to not have coverage and MCPS has not actually extended in many years regardless of the policy). My concern is that my kids will have completed the planned 10 week 4th quarter and their time will not be well spent in most cases. Teachers feel free to chime in and tell me I am wrong. Tell me what types of activities you will plan. What does 2.0 tell you to do on week 10 of the 4th quarter? Thanks!