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Obama advocates longer school year |
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oldpbnoob
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Topic: Obama advocates longer school yearPosted: 27 September 2010 at 3:57pm |
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Hmm. This ought to get interesting. Seems like numbers are down, and now it sounds like he is pushing for a year round school. Not saying I don't agree, but I wonder how well this will go over with the teachers union which he was heavily backed by from my understanding.......
Edited by oldpbnoob - 27 September 2010 at 3:57pm |
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jmac3
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 3:59pm |
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School all year round is fine if the schools days are half the time.
School all year with the same times or longer school days are useless. I doubt kids will pay attention at all half the time. |
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Que pasa?
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GroupB
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:07pm |
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someone doesn't know how year-round school works
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choopie911
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:08pm |
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School all year round wont happen, the whole concept of summer is too culturally engrained to be broken anytime soon. More school days is a good thing though, we're way too big on doing the bare minimum.
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:11pm |
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It seems like a good idea. The rest of the world is generally testing better than we are, and the ones who are not are catching up fast. Part of the reason our schooling schedule has maintained the silly break it has - with that much length - is because 1) Teachers unions will complain about having to work the same hours as other folks, 2) Back in the day kids were needed to plant/harvest during break times, and 3) HVAC didn't exist, and kids tend to not pay attention well when it is 97*.
It's at least worth considering and slowing adapting a longer school year as not to spook everyone involved. Oh, wait, Obama said it? This is clearly a socialist takeover of the education system to make us more like the communists in Europe and Asia. Home school your kids before the moonbats teach them evolution. Edited by agentwhale007 - 27 September 2010 at 4:14pm |
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jmac3
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:12pm |
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If you are talking about me, then that is true. Edited by jmac3 - 27 September 2010 at 4:12pm |
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Que pasa?
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Yomillio
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:16pm |
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QFT. While I agree that a proper year-round school schedule would be the right move, 'summer break' and everything that comes with it is too much a part of our culture to go anywhere anytime soon. Small, gradual schedule reforms may eventually lead us to a year-round direction, but I don't see it happening all at one sudden time.
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oldpbnoob
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:28pm |
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Like I said though, I am not against it, but wonder how the union backers that voted heavily in his favor will react. Akin to biting the hand that fed you.
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"When I grow up I want to marry a rich man and live in a condor next to the beach" -- My 7yr old daughter.
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rednekk98
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:34pm |
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Keeping near the same amount of school days in the schedule but spacing the breaks out better might be helpful since kids data dump so much. I'm on the fence about it, as someone entering the teaching field I could live with time off for spring fishing and hunting season instead of a full summer break, but I did already have several days where it was over 100*F in the classroom w/o AC. Also, this would screw over summer camps in a big way. Optional summer programs would be great, I see the benefits affluent kids get from a structured environment during the summer, even if it isn't academic work. Provide summer programs for decent students at low cost that involve things like field-trips, and have those as incentives for the summer-school crowd. A 3-4 week summer program open to all students could be great. Mandate grade-level performance in certain areas so poor students will have time to make it up, and more electives for other students. I could totally build a curriculum for students to help plan a 3 day hike and actually do it, and if it weren't for stupid MA laws we could set up our climbing wall and maybe get a ropes course in again. Anything is better than having kids in front of the X-Box all day during the summer, and parents don't necessarily have the time to take kids on vacation.
As to the lack of need for kids to do work, I'm taking it easy on homework for the next few weeks since it's firewood stacking season in the northeast. Had a 14 year old girl in class today who gave herself a nasty burn from the exhaust on a chainsaw. Kids could use some time to work, especially if their parents aren't going to buy them a car. Working more than 10hrs a week tends to correlate with lower grades during the school year. |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:35pm |
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Relax, killer, that was tongue-in-cheek. |
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oldpbnoob
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:40pm |
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"When I grow up I want to marry a rich man and live in a condor next to the beach" -- My 7yr old daughter.
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 4:45pm |
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I agree with you, if it is any consolidation or Internet-hug. People on both sides of the general political viewpoint will flip out, like you said: Labor folks will be in a tizzy about (GASP) having a normal-people schedule, and the lovely Tea Party folks will get the vapors even thinking about a tax increase, even if it is spent on education. It'll never happen at any pace more than tiny little baby steps because of the general populace. |
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MeanMan
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 5:04pm |
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It would be nearly impossible at this point, at least in the Cleveland area.
Almost all of our schools are older, which means NO air conditioning. Yes its cleveland, but an 85* room with 25 people in it with lights on.....
Plus, does he not realize how horribly under-funded the school systems are? Some schools out west got cut to 4 days per week to save money (on the news a while ago). Even suburbs around here cant pass a budget increase for years at a time. Year round would need an immense budget increase just to get the year round school going. Forget about improvements to buildings, newer books, busing repairs....
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DaveEllis
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 5:11pm |
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Year round schooling actually doesn't sound bad.
Seeing as the demographic here is not far off from those days, or still there, we all loved summer break...but I think we can all admit that by the end of them they were dragging and you didn't know what to do with yourself. But year round schooling offers nice breaks more frequently...its not a bad system.
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__sneaky__
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 5:19pm |
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While I was in school, I was fully against it. Now, I'm all for it.
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brihard
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 6:24pm |
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You want to fix school? Quality first, then quantity.
Right now the little darlings are coddled. Teachers can't fail students because they'll cry and because parents will complain and write letters. Kids are not taught accountability or deadlines, and when they eventually get to college it's a rude kick in the junk when the prof doesn't care to hear excuses. Let teachers evaluate students fairly and hold them to reasonable expectations. Give them homework, and put some onus back on the parents. Not that any of this is likely... |
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GroupB
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 6:34pm |
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For those of you who think that year round school means going 5 days a week, every week, for a full year, it doesn't. The only difference between the traditional calendar, and year round is that in year round, the summer is spread out through the year. same number of days, same number of hours.
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oldpbnoob
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 7:26pm |
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With that said, I am not against it. I do like the idea of some sort of extended break, but nearly 3 months is a bit much. I would have no problem with kids getting off at the beginning of June and going back at the beginning of August. A two month break is plenty. I can also sympathize with teachers to the extent of needing a break. Hell, as a parent, dealing with kids year round is a pain. I wish I could get a month or two break a year from the ankle biters. However, I do see my own kid struggling at times to get back up to speed after watching ICarly and Americas Top Model for hours on end during the summer. They spend at least 2-4wks just relearning what they forgot over the summer. I did notice a little less of that this year though as she is finally at the point where they are dividing the kids into basic and advanced classes. There seemed to be a lot less reteaching the first couple of weeks at the advanced level and they pretty much got right into it.
What I don't get, it that I see the schools here taking off less time than they did when I was a kid. I remember getting a full two weeks off during Winter break and another full week off for Spring Break. I only remember them having one year where they got a full 10 days off over Christmas and they have never gotten more than a day off for Spring Break. I do remember hearing though that the schools in Florida were starting to go back a lot sooner than they do here. Seemed like almost a full month earlier. Edited by oldpbnoob - 27 September 2010 at 7:32pm |
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"When I grow up I want to marry a rich man and live in a condor next to the beach" -- My 7yr old daughter.
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jmac3
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 7:56pm |
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Schools now go back earlier in the summer than they did when I was in school. They stay the same amount too. They still have the Christmas Eve-Day after New Years off. Plus a week in spring.
Maybe there are more days off during the year though. |
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oldpbnoob
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Posted: 27 September 2010 at 8:28pm |
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I know they account for snow days here which is something they obviously didn't do in Florida. I don't see many other days off that we didnt get except obvioulsy MLK day. I also thought we used to get almost the entire week off for Thanksgiving. I could be wrong though.
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"When I grow up I want to marry a rich man and live in a condor next to the beach" -- My 7yr old daughter.
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