Anonymous wrote:Guess it depends on what is going at the school, staffing, etc. Bottom line, big whoop.
The examples given above don't require large amounts of staff. It only requires staff that don't sit around on their behinds. Seriously, why do county employees think poor performance is a right?
If a principal doesn't care about giving a bad orientation and bad first impression to the entering class then he or she should be removed.
Bottom line, stop accepting bad performance.
because snowflake Larla deserves itAnonymous wrote:My son's school has one Open House during the daytime and one at night sometime in November (it's a magnet school). If you don't go to that, there is nothing else. They have kindergarten registration in late April/May where all you do is come in at a certain time to register. A kindergarten teacher does a quick screening and that's it. I don't see why there needs to be a special orientation in the spring before the student starts school. The week before school starts, the students can visit their classroom and meet their teacher and there is also a picnic. Back to School Night is the 2nd week of school.
Anonymous wrote:Guess it depends on what is going at the school, staffing, etc. Bottom line, big whoop.
The examples given above don't require large amounts of staff. It only requires staff that don't sit around on their behinds. Seriously, why do county employees think poor performance is a right?
If a principal doesn't care about giving a bad orientation and bad first impression to the entering class then he or she should be removed.
Bottom line, stop accepting bad performance.
Guess it depends on what is going at the school, staffing, etc. Bottom line, big whoop.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for something substantive isn't looking for a dog and pony show. Its rude and incompetent to ask parents to take a day off from work and bring their kid into an "orientation" when the only thing done is collecting forms for the front office. This is bureaucrats with no accountability for performance being bureaucrats with no accountability for performance.
An orientation can be a tour of the school, sharing the weekly schedule, meeting the teachers, seeing the centers, getting to sit on a school bus, listening to a story, doing a small project together, visiting the library, sharing relevant information with parents.
Our school shared how the fifth graders walk the Ks onto the bus, went over field trips for the upcoming year, talked about the playground, and the kids all got to do things. The PTA provided cookies and drinks afterwards and the kids walked around with their parents looking at things. It wasn't that hard to make it more than turn in the forms.
Anonymous wrote:
Not OP but orientation is supposed to orient a child and parent to a school in advance. Tours, meeting teachers, staff, seeing classrooms. If preschools can do it, so can Kindergarten. If they are having all the current kids not come to school for 1-2 days, there should be something. Anyone can hand in forms. Hearing K teachers say at a table and talked to each other and not the students or parents speaks volumes if you ask me. I would be ticked off too. A little effort on initial impressions can go along way. I truly wish every school cost money instead of free state-wide funding via taxes and your child could decide where to go. Make these schools accountable. Hearing such huge discrepancies in these K orientations is pretty sad when you don't have an option.
Anonymous wrote:And luckily the OP has dodged the bullet and can still register her child for private school. Crisis averted!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then email the principal and express your concern. Live and learn I guess. It's public school so they don't have to put on a show for you. They don't care if your child goes to their school or not. Now, if this was an expensive private school, yeah, I would be pissed off. But it isn't.
Your comment just shows how sad and low the expectations are. EVERY school should welcome and orient everyone. Another reason private and parochial schools are so popular.