Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. We also need to have holidays for Eid and the other major Muslim holidays, because there are as many Muslims as Jews in DCPS. We can dismiss for the year in July. Easy peasy.
That is precisely how schools with significant Muslim and Jewish populations handle it. I assume your concern over schedule doesn't include an offer to have school on Christmas to make up the day.
There is the practical matter that most US employers are closed on Xmas. My employer is open for business on the High Holidays, so I would have to pay for childcare if schools closed on those days
Well we want to inconvenience anyone from the majority now would we. Let's just place the burden exclusively on members of minority religions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never lived in a school district that gave the high holidays off. I understand that when you move from one to the other it seems like you are "missing out" but it isn't a lot of school districts in the US that do it. I suggest you do what everyone else here is saying - just get over it, have your kids take the days off and receive an excused absence.
"get over it?" How would you feel if school was open for Christmas and Easter or a holiday you observed? As for never living in a school district that gave the high holidays off plenty of them do so just because you haven't experienced it doesn't mean it's the norm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never lived in a school district that gave the high holidays off. I understand that when you move from one to the other it seems like you are "missing out" but it isn't a lot of school districts in the US that do it. I suggest you do what everyone else here is saying - just get over it, have your kids take the days off and receive an excused absence.
"get over it?" How would you feel if school was open for Christmas and Easter or a holiday you observed? As for never living in a school district that gave the high holidays off plenty of them do so just because you haven't experienced it doesn't mean it's the norm.
Well, I probably wouldn't like Saudi Arabia or the UAE or Indonesia or whatever you're imagining. However, having grown up in a Western nation I've come to expect Western norms. That includes whatever the national (in our case, Federal) holidays are.
I don't have to imagine this weirdo place you want me to, because I don't live there. And if I thought I'd hate it, I wouldn't move there. Sheesh.
You sound fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never lived in a school district that gave the high holidays off. I understand that when you move from one to the other it seems like you are "missing out" but it isn't a lot of school districts in the US that do it. I suggest you do what everyone else here is saying - just get over it, have your kids take the days off and receive an excused absence.
"get over it?" How would you feel if school was open for Christmas and Easter or a holiday you observed? As for never living in a school district that gave the high holidays off plenty of them do so just because you haven't experienced it doesn't mean it's the norm.
Well, I probably wouldn't like Saudi Arabia or the UAE or Indonesia or whatever you're imagining. However, having grown up in a Western nation I've come to expect Western norms. That includes whatever the national (in our case, Federal) holidays are.
I don't have to imagine this weirdo place you want me to, because I don't live there. And if I thought I'd hate it, I wouldn't move there. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never lived in a school district that gave the high holidays off. I understand that when you move from one to the other it seems like you are "missing out" but it isn't a lot of school districts in the US that do it. I suggest you do what everyone else here is saying - just get over it, have your kids take the days off and receive an excused absence.
"get over it?" How would you feel if school was open for Christmas and Easter or a holiday you observed? As for never living in a school district that gave the high holidays off plenty of them do so just because you haven't experienced it doesn't mean it's the norm.