trey3216 said:
JL said:
trey3216 said:
cowboycwr said:
trey3216 said:
cowboycwr said:
Instead of 4 day school weeks I wish more districts would go to year round school with the breaks spread out more. It can be done where you still get a long break in summer, maybe the whole month of July, and it doesn't impact sports, college entrance, etc. and improves all aspects of school from discipline, attendance, grades, graduation rates, test scores, teacher burnout, etc.
I doubt year round school will prevent teacher burnout. Like I'd be willing to bet The King Ranch that year round school will not help with teacher burnout in any form or fashion.
I think it is something that would help and something that some studies should be done on, if not already done, to see if it helps.
I haven't looked at it a lot but teacher burnout reduction is always one of the pros I have seen for year round school so I would think there is something behind that claim (data, retention, teachers reporting less stress, etc.) for it to be used but it could just be a talking point.
I'd rather look into it to see if it is a solution for many areas posted above then just dismiss it without facts.
I'm not dismissing it outright without facts. I'm married to a teacher. Her mom was a teacher. Her friends are mostly teachers. From February on during the school year, they are counting down the days until it is over.
reason number 472983 to home school your kids
It's not the teachers' fault. You should come sit at the dinner table and listen to the crap I have to hear about her work....every damn day. It's a nightmare what our public school teachers have to put up with these days.
Agreed, but politicians tend to believe not only is our education system entirely broken, but we need to just keep what we are doing and throw even more taxpayer money at the industry while it accomplishes less and less for these kids and for society as a whole.
And, I get it: the teachers have to follow the instructions and curriculum that is coerced on them by the industry.
But, as a society, public education is ultimately creating an American workforce that cannot compete with China and other developing countries.
It just creates a bunch of socially indoctrinated idiots who are worthy of nothing except their potential to be controlled according to their needs.
And maybe that's what our government really wants out of its people: not a people who have hand a in government but government that has its hands in everything.
"Smarter than the Average Bear."