Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
How would that work for families who travel to family for extended periods, divorced families where one parent only gets summers or teens with summer school, work or speciality camps? It might be good for those who need child care but two schools did year round. One school wanted to keep it, the other did not and was cut. Teachers cannot take off during the school year so this could also hurt them too.
Anonymous wrote:A year-round schedule would hypothetically still be 180 days, just distributed differently. The year-round schedule some schools had/have in MCPS was an additional 30 days (210, I believe). If the entire system went to year-round, the schedule for 180 days could look something like this: 4 week summer, 1 week off after 1st quarter, 1-2 weeks for winter break, 1 week off in February, 1 week for Spring Break and 1-2 weeks off in May. You basically distribute the other 6 weeks of summer throughout the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Will it still be 180 days of school? If so, most teachers I work with wouldn't be interested. A lot of us rely on the money we make in the summer at second jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Have you asked us? I’m all for it. I would LOVE a year-round schedule. I assume, of course, that you’ll pay me accordingly.
Same. I would LOVE year round. More breaks off during the year would be great for everyone. We could actually teach the entire curriculum spaced out and have more time to grade and plan effectively. But it would never happen here. I feel it’s a pipe dream.
This does not jive with teaching staff at Roscoe Nix who OVERWHELMINGLY were against their year-round school calendar and successfully petitioned the BOE to discontinue it.
Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Have you asked us? I’m all for it. I would LOVE a year-round schedule. I assume, of course, that you’ll pay me accordingly.
Same. I would LOVE year round. More breaks off during the year would be great for everyone. We could actually teach the entire curriculum spaced out and have more time to grade and plan effectively. But it would never happen here. I feel it’s a pipe dream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Have you asked us? I’m all for it. I would LOVE a year-round schedule. I assume, of course, that you’ll pay me accordingly.
Yes I have talked with some teachers about this and they were not in favor. They thought it would just be more work. That research hasn’t indicated it’s better for kids learning. Didn’t want to start the school year earlier. Etc. Meanwhile I know teachers in other states who have year-round schedules or a modified version of the year-round schedule and most of them would never go back to a traditional calendar unless absolutely forced by a move to somewhere that didn’t have school districts with options. Why? Because they all agree it’s better mentally for them and the kids as it gives everyone needed breaks.
So if teachers here would actually like a year round or a modified version of year round, I would recommend talking to your colleagues and union.
An extended calendar is not up to teachers. It is up to the school superintendent and county leaders. They do not listen to what teachers want but they may be more responsive to what parents want. You should get parents to lobby the school board if you want a year round calendar
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oof, I do feel badly for English teachers, they do have an incredible amount of papers to grade.
Not just English teachers these days. Due to curriculum changed, there’s an enormous amount of writing in other subjects as well. I think only math was spared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oof, I do feel badly for English teachers, they do have an incredible amount of papers to grade.
Not just English teachers these days. Due to curriculum changed, there’s an enormous amount of writing in other subjects as well. I think only math was spared.
Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet teachers don’t want to move away from a traditional school schedule towards some version of a year round schedule.
Have you asked us? I’m all for it. I would LOVE a year-round schedule. I assume, of course, that you’ll pay me accordingly.
Yes I have talked with some teachers about this and they were not in favor. They thought it would just be more work. That research hasn’t indicated it’s better for kids learning. Didn’t want to start the school year earlier. Etc. Meanwhile I know teachers in other states who have year-round schedules or a modified version of the year-round schedule and most of them would never go back to a traditional calendar unless absolutely forced by a move to somewhere that didn’t have school districts with options. Why? Because they all agree it’s better mentally for them and the kids as it gives everyone needed breaks.
So if teachers here would actually like a year round or a modified version of year round, I would recommend talking to your colleagues and union.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oof, I do feel badly for English teachers, they do have an incredible amount of papers to grade.
Not just English teachers these days. Due to curriculum changed, there’s an enormous amount of writing in other subjects as well. I think only math was spared.