underPSI tillerman 14085 Posts user info edit post |
Ok, fine, so they don't want their kids in year-round school. so pull them out and put them in private school. yes, i understand they can't afford private school so they need to quit their bitching. the school system is doing everything they can to accommadate the rapid growth. but here's the big thing i dont understand. Why are the parents who are against the year-round schedule not going to vote for the school bond? do they not understand that this only hurts themselves?? do they really think that they'll "show them" by not voting for the school bond? seems like a bunch of self-centered idiots if you ask me. 10/3/2006 9:30:39 AM |
Smath74 All American 93278 Posts user info edit post |
bunch of self-centered idiots 10/3/2006 9:33:39 AM |
underPSI tillerman 14085 Posts user info edit post |
just checkin'. 10/3/2006 9:35:18 AM |
Wolfpacker06 Suspended 5482 Posts user info edit post |
Wait, they're refusing to vote for the school bond as a protest against year round schools?
...year round schools because there aren't enough schools right now...bond creates schools...SAY NO TO THE BOND 10/3/2006 9:37:40 AM |
underPSI tillerman 14085 Posts user info edit post |
exactly 10/3/2006 9:40:03 AM |
Wolfpacker06 Suspended 5482 Posts user info edit post |
When keeping it real...goes wrong 10/3/2006 9:41:02 AM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
I'm sure these yuppies want the county to cut some of its medicaid services so that they can hire more teachers instead of building new schools. Besides, only poor minorities use medicaid. 10/3/2006 9:45:56 AM |
e30ncsu Suspended 1879 Posts user info edit post |
the bond just lets city planners not do shit and get away with it, we need to stop this trend of using bonds to fix poor planning 10/3/2006 9:45:58 AM |
crazywolf96 All American 1001 Posts user info edit post |
i really like the year-round school schedule. i mean, they're still going to school for 180 days, the same as the traditional calendar. there is just more breaks, longer time off for holidays and the kids don't get dumb during the summer. 10/3/2006 9:49:11 AM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
If by planners you mean developers, yes. They are supposed to collect impact fees are there has been some legislation in some cities that makes developers pass a litmus test as to whether there are enough services in the area to meet the needs of new citizens. The problem is that the cities don't want to pass on the property taxes of rich white people just because the county can't handle the school situation. 10/3/2006 9:49:24 AM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "i really like the year-round school schedule. i mean, they're still going to school for 180 days, the same as the traditional calendar. there is just more breaks, longer time off for holidays and the kids don't get dumb during the summer." |
The main problem, I think, is that it forces parents to pay for more expensive "year-round" camps/daycare during the odd breaks in the middle of the fall/spring/winter.10/3/2006 9:50:40 AM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
my elementary school in Blowing Rock did a year-round experiement in the early 90s when i was in 6th and 7th grade. It was completely optional - they ran both a traditional calendar and a year-round calendar out of the same school at the same time, but of course all the classes were held seperately (or most of them, maybe not stuff like gym). anyway, it was fully optional - if you wanted to stay in the traditional calendar, basically nothing changed for you or your kid. just some of his classmates were on a different calendar (my brother and i did the year round for 2 years - it was veyr nice).
anyway - you wouldn't believe the shitstorm of anger towards the school from some parents. It was crazy - people were pulling their kids out, moving across town to get into another district, complaining to the newspapers, blah blah blah. all they had to do was stay in the same calendar and nothing would have changed.... just people scared of change and not thinking rationally i guess 10/3/2006 9:52:35 AM |
e30ncsu Suspended 1879 Posts user info edit post |
the county planners knew this would happen, and instead of doing something about it they just counted on taxpayers to bail them out... again 10/3/2006 10:03:16 AM |
jbtilley All American 12797 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "The main problem, I think, is that it forces parents to pay for more expensive "year-round" camps/daycare during the odd breaks in the middle of the fall/spring/winter." |
And if you have more than one kid and they get on schedules where the vacation times do not overlap you can pretty much count out vacations. It's all poor planning. So there are more people in the county - that should also mean you were collecting more taxes from those people - taxes that should have gone toward new schools instead of whatever pork barrel crap it eventually went to.
BTW I thought the lottery was supposed to save us 10/3/2006 10:13:24 AM |
ImYoPusha All American 6249 Posts user info edit post |
when keeping it sub-urban goes wrong 10/3/2006 10:18:10 AM |
Fermata All American 3771 Posts user info edit post |
My freshman year of high school I was able to transfer from Southeast Raleigh to Athens Drive by simply sending in a letter stating that I didn't want to be in a rear round school anymore.
That was before this craziness.
Unfortunately, I don't see another viable solution as there are just too many damn people moving to this area.
Not suprisingly there has been a huge increase in home-school groups from parents pulling their kids out of traditional schools(sometimes even at the 6th grade to beyond level). 10/3/2006 10:22:14 AM |
jbtilley All American 12797 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "a rear round school anymore" |
Flat bottom schools FTW 10/3/2006 10:27:47 AM |
Perlith All American 7620 Posts user info edit post |
Link plz. 10/3/2006 10:40:08 AM |
jbtilley All American 12797 Posts user info edit post |
http://www.wral.com/news/9988727/detail.html 10/3/2006 10:57:24 AM |
jcs1283 All American 694 Posts user info edit post |
I really think with all the energy and time spent by some of these parents to try to get what they want out of public schools whether it is year-round propositions or school reassignment, they could work doing something useful and then have the money to send their kids to a private school where they would get a better education anyway.
In terms of switching to year-round, the people that really get screwed are the teachers. They no longer have long summer breaks during which they can hold down a reasonable side job to offset a low salary. Plus if they have kids, they are having to either move them to year round from whatever school and friends they were used to, or pay out the ass for childcare. 10/3/2006 12:46:28 PM |
msb2ncsu All American 14033 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "They no longer have long summer breaks during which they can hold down a reasonable side job to offset a low salary. " |
Average NC teacher makes $48,000 a year and should be in the mid 50's within the next couple years... I have no sympathy.10/3/2006 12:52:13 PM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
No, actually, being a year-round teacher is quite ideal if you are a teacher with kids in the same track as you. Tough shit to the kids... make new friends. 10/3/2006 12:52:57 PM |
sarijoul All American 14208 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "No, actually, being a year-round teacher is quite ideal if you are a teacher with kids in the same track as you. Tough shit to the kids... make new friends. siblings?" |
10/3/2006 12:55:47 PM |
Lutra All American 12588 Posts user info edit post |
My parents and the family I sit for love year round school. I think it'd suck to have my kids hanging around for two weeks every six weeks. I mean, if you work what the hell are you supposed to do with them? 10/3/2006 12:56:39 PM |
BobbyDigital Thots and Prayers 41777 Posts user info edit post |
voting 'no' is likely just shooting themselves in the foot if they are opposed to year round schools. The reason for year round schools is to accommodate more students...and if we want to be able to accommodate more students without using year round schools then we need to provide more funds for the county to fund other methods for accommodating students (such as building new schools or more classrooms). This could have been avoided if the school board and Wake County Board of Commissioners hadn't been so myopic in accommodating for the population boom years ago.
Voting down the bond plan is just forcing their hand more towards year-round schools as they will have to accommodate all the new students somehow and year round schools will be the likely path they take.
Here is a list of items the bond plan is supposed to fund: The 2007-09 Schools Building Program: $1.056 billion:
$970 million in general obligation school construction bonds $86 million in cash from the county's budget
What We'll Get:
17 new schools (11 elementary, 4 middle, 2 high) 13 comprehensive renovation projects Aversboro Elementary Bugg Elementary Lacy Elementary Lynn Road Elementary Poe Elementary Root Elementary Smith Elementary Wilburn Elementary East Millbrook Middle Martin Middle Cary High East Wake High
Repairs and maintenance projects such as reroofing, and boiler and carpet replacements at nearly 100 other schools. Five-year technology replacement and upgrade program. Funding for land and startup design of 13 future schools (7 elementary, 4 middle, 2 high).
Notice the number of new schools on the list. The money has to come from somewhere. I personally would like to see more funds coming from new development...as that is what is causing a lot of the influx of students. And of course, we taxpayers are going to have to pay the price for the Wake County Board of Commissioners' fuckup.
Now, some developers have offered the school board land to build schools adjacent to new developments IF the new neighborhoods would be assigned to those schools. The school board has said no, because of their diversity policies.
Clearly, some new schools are needed, but due to the cyclical nature of generations, just building more and more schools to meet the current boom is just as short sighted as what was already done (nothing). Year round schools offer the flexibility to deal with cyclical population bursts with the least amount of taxpayer burden.
The only (realistic) way to ensure that everyone who wants traditional school gets traditional is to build schools at a near non-stop pace. You can, with enough money, reach the point of equilibrium where all are happy. Then the local population of school age children will slowly wane and, assuming that some parents of these children do not move out of their houses, you will end up with not enough kids to fill the schools that have been built and they will be closed. This will put some kids back on buses (when they used to be able to walk to school) and taxpayers will still have to pay for the land that is now unused.
Ok, i didn't realize I wrote so much until after I posted. [/blog] ] 10/3/2006 1:01:32 PM |
ssjamind All American 30102 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Average NC teacher makes $48,000 a year and should be in the mid 50's within the next couple years" |
just curious, what's the starting salary?10/3/2006 1:21:21 PM |
Lee Veteran 313 Posts user info edit post |
If is public knowledge as to what Wake County teachers make http://www.wcpss.net/salary-schedules/teachers/. The teachers making 48K have been teaching since the WWII, unless they have a masters. Teachers got an 8% raise this year and make get the same next year. My wife will just start making ~36-39K next year after she finishes her masters. The starting salary depends on the number of years experience you have in the area of teaching you want to go into. If you have been a CPA for 5 years and want to get teach accounting in high school then you will be bumped to the 5 year level, so the wife tells me. 10/3/2006 1:36:28 PM |
vinylbandit All American 48079 Posts user info edit post |
Anyone who protests year-round schools better have a cash crop that needs harvesting. 10/3/2006 1:49:17 PM |
YOMAMA Suspended 6218 Posts user info edit post |
The shit will hit the fan before ITB goes year round. 10/3/2006 1:52:08 PM |
Perlith All American 7620 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "The only (realistic) way to ensure that everyone who wants traditional school gets traditional is to build schools at a near non-stop pace. You can, with enough money, reach the point of equilibrium where all are happy. Then the local population of school age children will slowly wane and, assuming that some parents of these children do not move out of their houses, you will end up with not enough kids to fill the schools that have been built and they will be closed." |
The first part is pretty much what has happened to Charlotte. My younger brother is currently attending the same middle school as I was but I'm not sure what they are going to do with him in high school. I dunno about your second point ... it depends on the long-term growth of the city/surrounding area.
Btw, what is the reasoning for year-round schools? I'm neither for or against it, but I'm corious as to why they would want to do a major conversion ... not something that typically happens out of the blue.10/3/2006 2:15:53 PM |
BobbyDigital Thots and Prayers 41777 Posts user info edit post |
You can service more students with the same facilities and staff. 10/3/2006 2:29:59 PM |
JP All American 16807 Posts user info edit post |
solution: stop having kids 10/3/2006 2:35:23 PM |
ssjamind All American 30102 Posts user info edit post |
^ how quaint, a European! 10/3/2006 2:37:50 PM |
duro982 All American 3088 Posts user info edit post |
the reasoning is mostly ^^^, also teachers don't have to spend as much time reviewing at the beginning of the year. 10/3/2006 2:56:03 PM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
It's mostly to use the same building and yet have 33% more students. 10/3/2006 2:59:02 PM |
PackQT82 All American 3370 Posts user info edit post |
As a public school teacher, we're honestly running out of space. It's fine and dandy to hire more of us, but where are they going to teach their classes? The space just isn't there. We need more schools built...that's one of the best solutions.
msb2ncsu...I will not get on a soapbox about this, but do yourself a favor and hush. We can debate the teacher salary issue all day if you'd like. 10/3/2006 3:11:41 PM |
BridgetSPK #1 Sir Purr Fan 31378 Posts user info edit post |
It looks like year-round is our only option. I mean, we could have stopped development and said, "Look, Yankees, you can work in RTP, but you can't stay here..." but then we wouldn't have all the big, fancy malls and shit...oh wait... 10/3/2006 3:19:08 PM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
fancy malls... leading high-tech corridor in the nation world... I guess that's the same thing
[Edited on October 3, 2006 at 3:39 PM. Reason : .] 10/3/2006 3:39:39 PM |
Perlith All American 7620 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "You can service more students with the sam facilities and staff." |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_round_school
I'm assuming Wake is going to use multi-track scheme referred to here?10/3/2006 3:51:34 PM |
MrUniverse All American 26072 Posts user info edit post |
maybe the govt to fund more schools and less military war efforts... that would be nice
maybe that way schools could accomodate the growth as you say, without going year round
just a thought
[Edited on October 3, 2006 at 3:54 PM. Reason : ] 10/3/2006 3:54:13 PM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
Wake already has a year-round scheme for the magnet schools that are year round, so I'd assume yes. 10/3/2006 3:55:37 PM |
hdstewar Veteran 114 Posts user info edit post |
"It's mostly to use the same building and yet have 33% more students."
I'm not doubting that statement is correct, but I'm curious as to how changing the calender suddenly allows 33% more students.... 10/3/2006 3:55:39 PM |
drunknloaded Suspended 147487 Posts user info edit post |
when i was younger i use to be against year round schools
now in my old age i see that its probably better 10/3/2006 3:56:33 PM |
Str8BacardiL ************ 41754 Posts user info edit post |
I want to go up their protests and be like STFU NOOBS. 10/3/2006 3:57:06 PM |
Crede All American 7339 Posts user info edit post |
^^^ You have three classrooms and four classes of students. The trick is that every three weeks a fourth of the students are on a 3 week break. Currently you have four classrooms and they all go on break at the same time.
[Edited on October 3, 2006 at 4:04 PM. Reason : .] 10/3/2006 3:57:45 PM |
boonedocks All American 5550 Posts user info edit post |
New schools are very important. Otherwise you end up with teachers floating from room to room for each class (like me). It's a fact that floaters have lower EOC scores (I'll be an exception, of course ). It's very difficult to run a classroom out of a cart.
Btw, teachers in NC start at about 28k. Wake (the highest paying county in NC) gives their teachers a suppliment that brings the total starting salary to 32k. 10/3/2006 4:06:57 PM |
jcs1283 All American 694 Posts user info edit post |
These parents that protest are probably the same parents that lead me to have the opinion that teachers will never get paid enough. For the amount of patience you must display ever day, not for the the children you teach, but the parents, you couldn't pay me enough. From stories I have heard, not just telling every one of them, yes your kid is an idiot, and no the apple didn't fall far from the tree, would take every ounce of energy I have. Bottom line, there is no free lunch. If you want your kid to have their education be just as you'd like, you have to pay. Either in taxes and bonds, private school tuition, or lost wages because of homeschooling. 10/3/2006 5:00:07 PM |
PackQT82 All American 3370 Posts user info edit post |
^ 10/3/2006 5:10:12 PM |
tchenku midshipman 18586 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "You have three classrooms and four classes of students. The trick is that every three weeks a fourth of the students are on a 3 week break. Currently you have four classrooms and they all go on break at the same time" |
So that means if you have 2 or more kids, they likely wouldn't have vacations at the same time? Sucks for vacations, trips, etc. Does going to year-round automatically mean they'll go to this rotating schedule? Because I was confused about how you can suddenly teach more kids by just changing it, too.10/3/2006 5:12:30 PM |
OmarBadu zidik 25071 Posts user info edit post |
are teachers getting paid the same for 3 months more of work? 10/3/2006 5:15:11 PM |