Anonymous wrote:Remove the 1/2 days. It is not productive at all.
Anonymous wrote:Is 1 week of winter break normal in Montgomery county? I'm not from here but I've always had two weeks of winter break
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent there are several things I like about the calendar for next year.
1- post Labor Day start - partially due to tradition, but mostly b/c it allows for the first several weeks of school to be more consistent. Many years in MCPS you can go three or four weeks before having a full week of school- it makes setting the routines at home and school difficult.
Whose tradition? I always started school in mid-to-late August, going back to the early 1970s.
Really? I went to school in the mid 70s and we started after Labor Day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent there are several things I like about the calendar for next year.
1- post Labor Day start - partially due to tradition, but mostly b/c it allows for the first several weeks of school to be more consistent. Many years in MCPS you can go three or four weeks before having a full week of school- it makes setting the routines at home and school difficult.
Whose tradition? I always started school in mid-to-late August, going back to the early 1970s.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you all should be really impressed with yourselves--managed to make it to the fourth page before everything became the fault of those greedy, lazy teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have been in MCPS collectively since 2004. Unfortunately, they have consistently told me that half days are a complete waste of time and that most of the teachers do nothing on those days other than show movies/videos. This isn't that big a deal in elementary, but once they get into middle and high school it becomes a complete waste of instructional time. Part of the problem is that the class periods in middle school and high school are very short on half days and the other problem is that many kids (and their parents) have given up on them being productive school days so just allow their kids to stay home. My kids have actually sent me pictures of half empty classrooms. We have another one coming up this Friday (people will just make it a long weekend) and I know that my DD is going to beg me to let her skip it and sleep in. Mostly I just say no, but I don't blame them for wanting to catch some extra shut eye instead of being bored in school for four hours.
What school cluster is this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear teacher, thank you for your comments. I especially understand point 6, as I have heard some principals schedule 2 hour meetings throughout the 4-5 days prior to first day of school (for students) and it makes setting up classrooms difficult.
However, I'm not sure where you get 9 vs. 10 weeks in point 5. Summer 2018 will be 12 weeks (June 12 - Sept. 4 is exactly 12 weeks.) Do you feel that 12 weeks will not be much different than 9?
12 weeks is way too long.
Yes, I agree. 12 weeks is much too long. I don't mind starting after Labor Day, but having to end so early in June creates a hardship for many families who will need to cover 12 weeks of summer. We are lucky our kids are older and can stay by themselves at home for a day here or there. I feel badly for the parents of younger kids who will needs camp for many of those 12 weeks -- vacation time only goes so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear teacher, thank you for your comments. I especially understand point 6, as I have heard some principals schedule 2 hour meetings throughout the 4-5 days prior to first day of school (for students) and it makes setting up classrooms difficult.
However, I'm not sure where you get 9 vs. 10 weeks in point 5. Summer 2018 will be 12 weeks (June 12 - Sept. 4 is exactly 12 weeks.) Do you feel that 12 weeks will not be much different than 9?
12 weeks is way too long.
Anonymous wrote:Dear teacher, thank you for your comments. I especially understand point 6, as I have heard some principals schedule 2 hour meetings throughout the 4-5 days prior to first day of school (for students) and it makes setting up classrooms difficult.
However, I'm not sure where you get 9 vs. 10 weeks in point 5. Summer 2018 will be 12 weeks (June 12 - Sept. 4 is exactly 12 weeks.) Do you feel that 12 weeks will not be much different than 9?
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent there are several things I like about the calendar for next year.
1- post Labor Day start - partially due to tradition, but mostly b/c it allows for the first several weeks of school to be more consistent. Many years in MCPS you can go three or four weeks before having a full week of school- it makes setting the routines at home and school difficult.