Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this a ridiculous policy? I do 't get it.
Personally we love the longer summer. If you don't like it, then put your kid in an academic camp or something. It's nice to have that long break.
We always started after Labor Day when I was growing up in NY.
Because it's bad for kids' education to be out of school that long -- especially poor kids. Whose parents are not going to put them in an academic camp or something.
Oh, please. It's been discussed on here before. MCPS offers educational opportunities for poor/lower income students over the summer. Plus free meals at churches/some schools. It's perfectly fine for their (and all kids') education to have a little bit of a break.
Spoken like someone for whom paying for an extra week of summer camp/day care is no big deal. Must be nice.
It costs me much more to find childcare each random day off. We don't use our before/after care because we purposely set up our work schedules to avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because school really is a daycare that trains students for future factory work and not a place of learning.
I see this more and more as an educator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's political because the Board of Ed sends out info to inform their constituency about a change that will affect them/the school calendar? Get a grip! If they sent nothing and just made the change you'd consider them corrupt for not making the process public.
What exactly would you preferred they have done, given that the calendar will change considerably next year?
I would also like people to answer that question. Would you have preferred for the Board of Education to not inform you about the calendar?
Anonymous wrote:It's political because the Board of Ed sends out info to inform their constituency about a change that will affect them/the school calendar? Get a grip! If they sent nothing and just made the change you'd consider them corrupt for not making the process public.
What exactly would you preferred they have done, given that the calendar will change considerably next year?
Anonymous wrote:Because school really is a daycare that trains students for future factory work and not a place of learning.
Anonymous wrote:Because school really is a daycare that trains students for future factory work and not a place of learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think 8 weeks of summer break are more than enough. We take 2 weeks vacation and six weeks of camp. My kids get sick of camp and look forward to getting back to school. Hogan is nuts! We vacationed at Cape Cod this year to protest Hogan’s mandate. No way am I giving Ocean City money for this idiocy.
Wait. So you’re pissed at Hogan. And you decided to take it out on small business owners in Ocean City. Okay, then. Kudos to you for sticking it to the Republicans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this a ridiculous policy? I do 't get it.
Personally we love the longer summer. If you don't like it, then put your kid in an academic camp or something. It's nice to have that long break.
We always started after Labor Day when I was growing up in NY.
Yes, we did start after Labor Day, but we also ended a lot later than June 15th.
They need the extra time to fit it all in.
Wrong. We ended in the mid to late teens every year. Never in the 20's. We also didn't have religious days and teacher days so 180 was easy to get to.
You didn't grow up where I did...NYC. We had religious days and finished late June. They still do. So, no I'm not wrong.
Anonymous wrote:My comment is that clearly many here have Elementary School students, and not High School students. When MCPS high school students are taking AP classes, and start a week later than everyone else, and the AP exams still happen the first week in May, our students are behind everyone else in learning. They need that time before Labor Day to get started with their classes. And while in elementary school, and even middle school, the first week may be discussing, "what I did this summer," that is NOT the case in high school.
My guess is, by the time their kids get to high school, most parents don't give a crap about what other people, including those on this forum, have to say, which is why you're not hearing anything about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this a ridiculous policy? I do 't get it.
Personally we love the longer summer. If you don't like it, then put your kid in an academic camp or something. It's nice to have that long break.
We always started after Labor Day when I was growing up in NY.
Because it's bad for kids' education to be out of school that long -- especially poor kids. Whose parents are not going to put them in an academic camp or something.
Oh, please. It's been discussed on here before. MCPS offers educational opportunities for poor/lower income students over the summer. Plus free meals at churches/some schools. It's perfectly fine for their (and all kids') education to have a little bit of a break.
Spoken like someone for whom paying for an extra week of summer camp/day care is no big deal. Must be nice.
Anonymous wrote:I think 8 weeks of summer break are more than enough. We take 2 weeks vacation and six weeks of camp. My kids get sick of camp and look forward to getting back to school. Hogan is nuts! We vacationed at Cape Cod this year to protest Hogan’s mandate. No way am I giving Ocean City money for this idiocy.