Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems
My teenager can barely get his homework done with 2 hours a day of sports practice, I don't know about yours.
Solution: TAKE HIM OUT OF SPORTS - they are optional
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6th grader currently gets 10-11 hrs of sleep per night. She'd have to go to bed earlier than a toddler to get more than 9 hrs sleep. MS is hard enough. Why are we turning kids into sleepwalking zombies?
Why are we fairfax county parents insisting on more and more school and forcing the kids into a 9-5 work day?? They will be working soon enough. The fluff needs to be cut and these kids need to spend less hours in school. This is a big problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6th grader currently gets 10-11 hrs of sleep per night. She'd have to go to bed earlier than a toddler to get more than 9 hrs sleep. MS is hard enough. Why are we turning kids into sleepwalking zombies?
Why are we fairfax county parents insisting on more and more school and forcing the kids into a 9-5 work day?? They will be working soon enough. The fluff needs to be cut and these kids need to spend less hours in school. This is a big problem.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't they actually make the full changes that would truly address the issue? This half-a$$ compromise doesn't do enough for the high schoolers, makes middle school worse, and leaves so many elementary schoolers sitting around waiting somewhere instead of in the classroom, learning, during their most alert hour of the morning!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These pampered high schoolers are going to be in fir a rude awakening when they graduate and have their first college class start at 7:30 with no parents to wake them or drive them to class halfway across campus,
Where did you go to college? Are you masochistic? My classes all started at 10 or later. I go a BSEE, not a fluff degree, if it matters. And very few jobs start earlier than 8, in central time or eastern time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems
My teenager can barely get his homework done with 2 hours a day of sports practice, I don't know about yours.
I was 11:09. My kids are in Kindergarten and preschool. My middle school (in Asia) was never ended before 5pm and with loads of homework my middle school life was very fulfilling. I just worry about my kids will have too much free time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think it's funny how so many people are worried about their up-coming ms students having to go to school at 7:30, when thousands of ms students in FCPS have been doing this for the last 40 years! Like you never noticed that other kids (at the secondary schools) had a raw deal? And suddenly now that it's your kid, it's unacceptable?
Suck it up. It's your kids' turn to catch the 6:40 a.m. bus.
So true. Once it affects someone personally, then it becomes unacceptable, but if it's someone else's kid waiting outside in the dark? Oh well, too bad.
Our middle school has always started at 7:40am, so 7:30 won't be a huge difference. The kids will still be waiting outside in the pitch dark for a 6:20 bus.
It's always been unacceptable, no one thinks otherwise. Many of us were hoping for an across the board improvement. I don't know why people think it's about "turns" or "sucking it up" because things were done a certain way in the past, everyone deserves to suffer at some point. It's faulty thinking. There isn't one way that will work for all students and families, but it is ironic that a mission to start school later is actually starting school earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems
My teenager can barely get his homework done with 2 hours a day of sports practice, I don't know about yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems
My teenager can barely get his homework done with 2 hours a day of sports practice, I don't know about yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems
Anonymous wrote:The consensus was essentially that middle schoolers could suck it up for 2 years of early starts in order to benefit from having the later start time for 4 years of HS.
Any option that provided more equality across start times would just cost too much $$$$, so this is what we're stuck with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle school student loves the early 7:20 start time because it leave plenty of "free" time in the afternoons. Sports, Homework, Outside, Friendships, etc...
Too much free time for teenagers cause problems