According to every single parent I know, yes. Also seems to drive the teachers batty.
It's a fine line. Most of us are insane already, as are the teachers. The kids are the carriers.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
According to every single parent I know, yes. Also seems to drive the teachers batty.
It's a fine line. Most of us are insane already, as are the teachers. The kids are the carriers.
Doesn't that drive the parents with more than one kid insane?
That would be a resounding yes. And it made it really tough for working parents.
In Israel, all schools (that aren't universities) start on the 1st of September. They all have the same vacations (around the Jewish holidays). Obviously, we don't have troubles like plenty of snow days to take care of.
Like I said, all schools under highschool end on a certain day, 10 days after the end of highschools. It's like that on each and every single year. People plan moving and vacations according to these dates (the prices drop off right afterwards, and the like). What an interesting difference.
What an interesting difference.
Yep. The state university in my hometown (a major employer) doesn't even have the same schedule as the local public schools. They try to keep it close, but since the local schools are always tweaking the schedule, it isn't hard and fast.
They try to keep it close
What universities here do is attempting to avoid colliding with the holiday season of the automn. There's nearly a month of holidays, going on according to the Jewish calendar, so its beginning can move from early September to early October.
The schools start on the 1st of September no matter what (which, yes, can sometime cause the craziness of going to school for a week and then throwing the whole schedule into vacation days spread all over the place, again). The universities wait until well after the ending of the holidays in order to begin their school year (so, yeah, their summers are longer, long enough to enable a summer semester if they want to).
I find it so interesting that here, with the combination of Jewish and general calendars, things are still in more order than what you describe.
Looks like this district has 3 different types of schedules [link] . One traditional, one...I'm not sure what it is, one multitrack year round (which means 4 different schedules on a year round cycle.)
(I have no idea why I'm googling all this. Avoiding work, I guess.)
I'm avoiding work too, or at least the physical building of work.
Playing hooky used to be more fun.
In Israel, all schools (that aren't universities) start on the 1st of September. They all have the same vacations (around the Jewish holidays). Obviously, we don't have troubles like plenty of snow days to take care of.
The public schools here (kindergarten through high school) are under individual state control, not federal control, which accounts for some of the difference. Then within each state, there can be differences from district to district.
I have no idea why I'm googling all this.
Um, because that's the power of the hivemind? One person asks a question, is too lazy to google herself, so some other person finds the answers for her?
Um, I mean, thanks. It's really interesting, in its own way.
individual state control, not federal control
Gotcha. I keep forgetting that difference, silly me.
Playing hooky used to be more fun.
Maybe you should do it under some other district's schedule? Maybe you're on vacation already according to one, and therefore playing hooky, when you anyway aren't supposed to work, has less of a flavor?
Maybe you're on vacation already according to one, and therefore playing hooky, when you anyway aren't supposed to work, has less of a flavor?
I love Nilly's spicy brains.