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Nate-ForLiberty
04-22-2010, 07:56 AM
Don't take your kids to work with you because the standardized testing which brings in federal funds for the school is more important? sheesh.


Schools urge parents not to take kids to work

By DON BABWIN (AP) – 4 hours ago

CHICAGO — Many U.S. school districts are urging parents to keep their kids in class and not take them to work Thursday for an annual event they say disrupts learning at an increasingly critical time of year.

From Arizona to Illinois to Texas, educators are alerting parents that between high-stakes standardized testing in some areas and the H1N1 virus that kept thousands of children home earlier in the school year, the timing of "Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day" doesn't make sense.

"This year, of all years, to have a student miss a day for something like this that could be done anytime — it just seems the focus should be on students and their learning here," said Guy Schumacher, the superintendent of Libertyville Elementary School District 70 in suburban Chicago.

Some administrators said they recognized that spending time with their parents at work could be a valuable educational experience for children, but it does not justify pulling them out of the classroom — even for one day.

"Stakes have never been higher for student achievement," wrote Virginia B. McElyea, the superintendent of the Deer Valley Unified School District in Phoenix, Ariz. "Every day your child is out of school his or her learning achievement suffers."

Administrators have been complaining about the event's date for well over a decade. Some have said they've contacted the Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Foundation to ask that it be held on a school holiday or during the summer, but the organization won't budge.

A spokesman for the foundation, George McKecuen, said it's important that the event — launched in 1993 for girls and expanded to include boys in 2004 — be held during the school year so children can go back and tell their classmates what they learned. He suggested schools might schedule a holiday or teacher work day on that day or: "Maybe they can do their tests some other day."

"It's always there on the calendar, the fourth Thursday in April," McKecuen said.

Darrell Propst, principal of Taylor Elementary School in Reynoldsburg, Ohio, said it's the same day his third- and fourth-graders are taking the Ohio Achievement Assessment test. Like others administrators who sent letters or posted e-mail messages on school Web sites, he asked parents to find another day to bring their children to work.

At schools where standardized tests aren't being given that day, the exams may be looming. Student test scores have become increasingly important to public schools since the 2002 No Child Left Behind law was enacted, linking standardized test results to federal funding.

"Because of the high-stakes testing we're involved in during the spring, the kids need to be in school as much as they can," said Ron Simpson, a spokesman for a regional education service center in Richardson, Texas.

Some parents, however, say their children learn enough about their parents and the world that day to make up for whatever they miss in class.

"I think it's a great opportunity for my daughter to see her mother in action, so to speak," said Alicia Agugliaro, who planned to take her 7-year-old daughter to the drug development company in Princeton, N.J., where she works in marketing communications. "Our company emphasized leadership and partnership, and I think that's a good message for kids."

Other parents, though, acknowledge it may not be worth it.

"I think it's a great experience for the kids to see what a professional environment is like, but they also may need to weigh that with how much they are going to miss at school, whether there is a test they will have to make up or what is going on that day," said Jill Krizek, who for years has brought her 11-year-old daughter and 15-year-old son to the bank in suburban Kansas City where she's a human resources director.

Her son, a high school freshman, has decided not to participate.

"He feels like he misses too much work," she said. "I have worked here 13 years, so it hasn't changed enough."

But McKecuen, from the Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Foundation, said the event gives students a chance to see the connection between what they learn in school and the skills they will need as adults. He said it also can spark children's interest in careers they might not have considered or known about.

That's what happened in Chicago, at the office of Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown.

In a letter written to Brown last November, Jade Ieshia Cage, a college freshman studying to be a lawyer, wrote that participating in the event "helped me decide what I want to do in my life."

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jGHP7Ed230Bxn6-Upff18dn_BUJwD9F81GQO0

MelissaWV
04-22-2010, 08:39 AM
I don't agree with the rationale in this case, but good Lord... please keep your kids at school/home. I hate seeing the "precious little angels" around the workplace. They aren't seeing how the place functions, because all functionality ceases while they're here.

silentshout
04-22-2010, 10:19 AM
I don't agree with the rationale in this case, but good Lord... please keep your kids at school/home. I hate seeing the "precious little angels" around the workplace. They aren't seeing how the place functions, because all functionality ceases while they're here.

^^ I agree with this. (and i have kids!)

Icymudpuppy
04-22-2010, 09:30 PM
I'm the boss, and kids are welcome everyday. Just don't let them climb the ladders or get near the cages.

angelatc
04-22-2010, 10:09 PM
The schools neglected to mention that the real reason they care is that they lose funds when attendance falls.

american.swan
04-22-2010, 10:22 PM
The schools neglected to mention that the real reason they care is that they lose funds when attendance falls.

+$$$

nate895
04-22-2010, 10:26 PM
One mom, as a student, came to my English comp. class with her kids today.

ChaosControl
04-22-2010, 10:29 PM
How dumb.

If I had a kid, I'd bring them to work. :D

angelatc
04-22-2010, 10:34 PM
My older son has two really big projects due, but I did consider making him stay home and make calls for Kokesh and Schiff.