Anonymous wrote:Get rid of buses and put the onus on parents to take personal responsibility for getting their kids to and from school. Problem solved, millions of $ saved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good with how they have handled this year other than the day they failed to close but should have.
I agree. You are exactly right. I have been laughing like crazy at how angry some of these people are getting on here. The moms I know are also fine with how they have done things this year.
Also agree.
While the extra days home with kids have been exhausting, drive me crazy at times, and stressful to juggle, I understand that safety comes first and I also understand that they are doing the best they can regarding the logistics of our large school system and the unique weather patterns we have in the Mid-Atlantic region.
I blame VDOT more, there were at least 2 days that were closed because of roads left unplowed and the day school wasn't cancelled the roads were a mess because they had not salted or cleared anything at all.
The over reaction on here to anything weather related is tiresome.
Funny, I don't know any parent IRL who supports all these closures except one. And guess what? She's also a teacher. Shocker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good with how they have handled this year other than the day they failed to close but should have.
I agree. You are exactly right. I have been laughing like crazy at how angry some of these people are getting on here. The moms I know are also fine with how they have done things this year.
Also agree.
While the extra days home with kids have been exhausting, drive me crazy at times, and stressful to juggle, I understand that safety comes first and I also understand that they are doing the best they can regarding the logistics of our large school system and the unique weather patterns we have in the Mid-Atlantic region.
I blame VDOT more, there were at least 2 days that were closed because of roads left unplowed and the day school wasn't cancelled the roads were a mess because they had not salted or cleared anything at all.
The over reaction on here to anything weather related is tiresome.
Anonymous wrote:I'm happy with the way FCPS has handled closures this winter, except for the Tuesday in January when they should have delayed or closed and did not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has over 180,000 students.
The school system has more buses than Greyhound.
A couple days every year is not really a big deal in the grand scheme of things.
This is true when you have a major snowstorm or event that really would bring even the most durable folks to their knees like the year of Snowmageddon. This hasn't been that. This has been a year of interruptions -- this past one for a week when you didn't know from one minute to the next what was going to happen when the snow event fizzled and kids used high temperatures to snowboard outside in hoodies. There is no excuse for this kind of arbitrariness.
And I realize I am in the minority in high achieving FCPS, but these kind of weeks are murder for my kid, an honors high schooler who really gets off track when there is no school and his teachers check out as well. Getting him back in the groove after all the time off, let alone to stay in the groove during the downtime is murder. I realize I'm alone in this, as most kids are getting homework from their teachers and staying in close touch with them via email, not to mention doing their sports teams workouts on their own, coming up with extra service work and cooking for their families, but it is what it is.
???? Does your DS have trouble getting back in the groove after weekends as well?
Not the PP, but part of the routine is weekends off, so probably not. Consider yourself lucky that you have such an adaptable child.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has over 180,000 students.
The school system has more buses than Greyhound.
A couple days every year is not really a big deal in the grand scheme of things.
This is true when you have a major snowstorm or event that really would bring even the most durable folks to their knees like the year of Snowmageddon. This hasn't been that. This has been a year of interruptions -- this past one for a week when you didn't know from one minute to the next what was going to happen when the snow event fizzled and kids used high temperatures to snowboard outside in hoodies. There is no excuse for this kind of arbitrariness.
And I realize I am in the minority in high achieving FCPS, but these kind of weeks are murder for my kid, an honors high schooler who really gets off track when there is no school and his teachers check out as well. Getting him back in the groove after all the time off, let alone to stay in the groove during the downtime is murder. I realize I'm alone in this, as most kids are getting homework from their teachers and staying in close touch with them via email, not to mention doing their sports teams workouts on their own, coming up with extra service work and cooking for their families, but it is what it is.
???? Does your DS have trouble getting back in the groove after weekends as well?[/quote]
No. On a typical weekend, he's on a more organized schedule because he usually has a sports competition and/or a practice so he has to organize his work around that. Teachers are also pretty good about giving homework on weekends, as opposed to snow days where, this week, for example, he had an assignment (reading) in one class out of seven.
Last year, a couple of his grades fell to C's in the second quarter after all the snow days. I don't want that to happen again. The fact that you have such a superior attitude about this suggests your kids don't have these problems -- if you even have kids, or more than 1. You might consider yourself lucky as opposed to be so judgmental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has over 180,000 students.
The school system has more buses than Greyhound.
A couple days every year is not really a big deal in the grand scheme of things.
This is true when you have a major snowstorm or event that really would bring even the most durable folks to their knees like the year of Snowmageddon. This hasn't been that. This has been a year of interruptions -- this past one for a week when you didn't know from one minute to the next what was going to happen when the snow event fizzled and kids used high temperatures to snowboard outside in hoodies. There is no excuse for this kind of arbitrariness.
And I realize I am in the minority in high achieving FCPS, but these kind of weeks are murder for my kid, an honors high schooler who really gets off track when there is no school and his teachers check out as well. Getting him back in the groove after all the time off, let alone to stay in the groove during the downtime is murder. I realize I'm alone in this, as most kids are getting homework from their teachers and staying in close touch with them via email, not to mention doing their sports teams workouts on their own, coming up with extra service work and cooking for their families, but it is what it is.
???? Does your DS have trouble getting back in the groove after weekends as well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS has over 180,000 students.
The school system has more buses than Greyhound.
A couple days every year is not really a big deal in the grand scheme of things.
This is true when you have a major snowstorm or event that really would bring even the most durable folks to their knees like the year of Snowmageddon. This hasn't been that. This has been a year of interruptions -- this past one for a week when you didn't know from one minute to the next what was going to happen when the snow event fizzled and kids used high temperatures to snowboard outside in hoodies. There is no excuse for this kind of arbitrariness.
And I realize I am in the minority in high achieving FCPS, but these kind of weeks are murder for my kid, an honors high schooler who really gets off track when there is no school and his teachers check out as well. Getting him back in the groove after all the time off, let alone to stay in the groove during the downtime is murder. I realize I'm alone in this, as most kids are getting homework from their teachers and staying in close touch with them via email, not to mention doing their sports teams workouts on their own, coming up with extra service work and cooking for their families, but it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:How old is your child PP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents can network with each other to solve these problems. Why not?
Exactly, find two other families. Each family is responsible for every third day off. To make it fun and community building, you can even add that one of the none off families is responsible for dinner that night.
Love this.
This does not fix the education issue though.