Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup. I was told I can't even play review games because that would give some kids more learning opportunities than others. Nowhere is that written in the insane regulation. They gave us a lot of what-not-to-do and very little as far as suggestions for what we CAN do.
You must have missed the email where they told us we can share information about the holiday![]()
Haha, yep!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.
The O days are not legal in the slightest. They are picking and choosing religious holidays to honor w/o a secular basis. Their own data do not support these days. Their own lawyers told them not to do it.
Is there a legal challenge in the works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
There was VERY clear training. I had to sit through a video, take a quiz, sit through powerpoint slides during back to school week, accept calendar invites with the rules attached to them, and have gotten multiple emails reminding me of the rules. Any teacher scheduling quizzes on that day is ignoring the rules, they aren't unaware.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
There was VERY clear training. I had to sit through a video, take a quiz, sit through powerpoint slides during back to school week, accept calendar invites with the rules attached to them, and have gotten multiple emails reminding me of the rules. Any teacher scheduling quizzes on that day is ignoring the rules, they aren't unaware.
Yup! This! Teacher is choosing not to follow rules and this should be made aware to admin. I am against the no teaching new content, but think no assessments and events on a holiday is absolutely fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
There was VERY clear training. I had to sit through a video, take a quiz, sit through powerpoint slides during back to school week, accept calendar invites with the rules attached to them, and have gotten multiple emails reminding me of the rules. Any teacher scheduling quizzes on that day is ignoring the rules, they aren't unaware.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
My child already has a problem - teacher scheduled quiz for Tuesday next week; child told teacher she will be out for Rosh Hashanah. Not sure when the make up quiz will be or what it will conflict with. But, this is not how the new "O" policy is supposed to work, and SB assured everyone there would be very clear training about it from the Superintendent's office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose kids are already running into problems with teachers giving tests or introducing new material on O days? Rosh Hashanah is next week, marked as a religious observance (O) day.
How can you be running into problems already? We haven't had on O day yet. The first one is next Tuesday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.
The O days are not legal in the slightest. They are picking and choosing religious holidays to honor w/o a secular basis. Their own data do not support these days. Their own lawyers told them not to do it.
Is there a legal challenge in the works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.
The O days are not legal in the slightest. They are picking and choosing religious holidays to honor w/o a secular basis. Their own data do not support these days. Their own lawyers told them not to do it.
Is there a legal challenge in the works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.
If it is not legal why do Arlington, Loudoun and PWCS have these days off?
They were following Fairfax and thought Fairfax had talked to their lawyer. Clown car of incompetence.
At least for APS, they had data that it would effect the ability of schools to be staffed. The number of students observing these holidays was not high, but they had a significant amount of staff absences on those days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.
If it is not legal why do Arlington, Loudoun and PWCS have these days off?
They were following Fairfax and thought Fairfax had talked to their lawyer. Clown car of incompetence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like it would have been easier to just have the four originally proposed days off.
Easier yes. Legal. No.
Then again, this is very much not legal.