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Keep teaching through May
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Simple solution...
Pay the teachers for two or three days AFTER the last day of school to do grades. Mail the report cards home like just about every other state in the union does.
Oh yeah, give the end of level testing at the END of the level. My son has a one semester science class in 7th grade. The took the test almost a whole MONTH before the end of the school year. From what I can figure a semester consists of about 90 days. They took the test with about 20 school days remaining. They still had over 20% of the semester left !!!
This issue comes up EVERY year. Paying the teachers a few extra days to do the paper work would solve the whole issue.
As a teacher for six years, I found ways to be fairly productive up until the last couple of days. It wasn't always easy, because some other teachers quit requiring work. It's easier when there's more solidarity.
@5:27 As a high school teacher in Jordan School District, I didn't have to submit my grades until after all the students had signed their yearbooks and gone home. I don't know what the practices are elsewhere, but I assume it's the same.
As parents, one thing we can do is send an email to the teacher (and a cc to the principal) POLITELY expressing our concerns and observations.
The school collected my kid's math book last week.
But as mentioned above, books are collected, fines have to be assessed, and grades must be submitted. Believe it or not, it actually takes a lot to run a classroom AND a school.
It would also help if students didn't have the 'school's almost out so let's not do anything' mentality.
Alot of my Jr. High students think they know it all too---most of us have grown out of the mentality when we realize there is so much more to learn.
As far as the babysitting comment: home schooled students don't have to pass tests that prove they are being taught.
Sounds like my shoes are a little too big for your feet.