Anonymous wrote:Why sweat the small stuff. Call in sick on bad weather days like everyone else who works for DCPS. At least half the kids are absent anyway so there's no point in wasting good lessons when most of the kids are absent.
Good teachers don't use most of their sick days so you have an abundant supply.
If you know you are not going to beat the weather and traffic or be able to make it to your school, you have to make the executive Snow Day decision in behalf of the chancellor, call in sick.
Teaching is difficult enough already, don't sweat the small stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Is there a new debacle today?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pp, I agree with you. But I will just add that all of our mayors, in the past 10 years have been reluctant to close schools. I teach in DCPS and long ago accepted that the people who make decisions largely do no care about safety for teachers, students, parents ect. It plays better for them to take on this soup kitchen role. Whatever, I honestly don't care.
There is a reason DC teachers get paid more than surrounding areas. It's because of crap like that. So either take the extra 10k and the disregard- or don't.
As for the teachers who commute from VA and MD... My sympathy extends only so far. I want safety for my fellow teachers- but those folks are kind of carpetbaggers. They come to DC for the higher salaries, so put up with the junk. Or teach in the county you live in.
To act like DC has a history of caring about the safety of folks is just wrong. They never have. So either accept it or move on.
I teach in DC too-if I could find some decent AFFORDABLE housing without having a roomate, I would live in DC. The majority of teachers are in my position as well-forced to commute.
But I take it DC doesn't give a sh*t about that, and would rather drag this "soup kitchen" image on.
Anonymous wrote:Pp, I agree with you. But I will just add that all of our mayors, in the past 10 years have been reluctant to close schools. I teach in DCPS and long ago accepted that the people who make decisions largely do no care about safety for teachers, students, parents ect. It plays better for them to take on this soup kitchen role. Whatever, I honestly don't care.
There is a reason DC teachers get paid more than surrounding areas. It's because of crap like that. So either take the extra 10k and the disregard- or don't.
As for the teachers who commute from VA and MD... My sympathy extends only so far. I want safety for my fellow teachers- but those folks are kind of carpetbaggers. They come to DC for the higher salaries, so put up with the junk. Or teach in the county you live in.
To act like DC has a history of caring about the safety of folks is just wrong. They never have. So either accept it or move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser should apologize--instead she was interviewed gently and responded like a High School sophomore, "...uh...we need to clear streets...we r not just out writing tickets..."...WAT?? But she looked cute in her Lexus 4 door with her cute bangle bracelet (shells? Reminder of a tropical vacation?) and furry parka.
Bowser is the responsible officer in the government. Public Works, DDOT and the chancellor all report to her, and it is her fault that coordination seemed totally lacking. DC got "Bowsered" and she needs to apologize and explain what steps she will take so it doesn't happen again.
Y'all are trying really hard to make that a thing.
So far the new mayor is acting like she hasn't got a clue.
She's not acting. She really doesn't have a clue.
Ever stop to think that maybe she has principles, just maybe not principles that are convenient for those who receive a taxpayer-paid paycheck or not convenient for those who'd rather not brave the weather and snuggle up in front of their TV? I for one liked her unapologetic "the government must be open for business whenever possible". She - along with the weathermen - may have underestimated how difficult that may become but I much prefer a mayor err on the side of keeping things running than closing it all down at every whim. She'll butt heads with some unions and a few SAHMs and SAHDs but so be it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser should apologize--instead she was interviewed gently and responded like a High School sophomore, "...uh...we need to clear streets...we r not just out writing tickets..."...WAT?? But she looked cute in her Lexus 4 door with her cute bangle bracelet (shells? Reminder of a tropical vacation?) and furry parka.
Bowser is the responsible officer in the government. Public Works, DDOT and the chancellor all report to her, and it is her fault that coordination seemed totally lacking. DC got "Bowsered" and she needs to apologize and explain what steps she will take so it doesn't happen again.
Y'all are trying really hard to make that a thing.
So far the new mayor is acting like she hasn't got a clue.
She's not acting. She really doesn't have a clue.
Ever stop to think that maybe she has principles, just maybe not principles that are convenient for those who receive a taxpayer-paid paycheck or not convenient for those who'd rather not brave the weather and snuggle up in front of their TV? I for one liked her unapologetic "the government must be open for business whenever possible". She - along with the weathermen - may have underestimated how difficult that may become but I much prefer a mayor err on the side of keeping things running than closing it all down at every whim. She'll butt heads with some unions and a few SAHMs and SAHDs but so be it.
PP sounds like DCPS Central talking. Safety does matter, get it? Bowser is already sounding like an arrogant Fenty who'll be here for one miserable term. No, schools are not glorified soup kitchens; they're primarily where kids go to learn and be challenged in a safe environment - but not so EoTP. Run it like a school, because that's what it is.