Wilktone wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 4:36 pm
Where do you live, Matt?
...
To complicate things further, some of my young students may not have very warm winter jackets and such. The district doesn’t want them waiting for the bus in subzero temperatures. You can’t just think about your children and their school’s demographics, disadvantaged students from low SEC may also not have warm clothes. Your school district may be taking that into account.
Forecast here is for very cold weather next Monday (already a day off for MLK Day) and Tuesday’s it will be interesting to see what they decide to do on Tuesday.
Dave
Northern West Virginia. Everyone here basically expects it to be cold. The daily mean is 32F (0C) and the mean daily minimum is 24F (-4C), with a mean min of 2F (-16C). If our district didn't want people waiting in subzero temperatures they are planning to fail by even scheduling school during January and February, and really even a good bit of March.
This county in particular doesn't have the same demographics as other counties: the more "urban" parts of the county where the infrastructure is best have a touch more of the disadvantaged students, but they're fairly even distributed between the "urban" (nothing here is urban) and the more rural parts of the county. In fact, for many students, the only way to get a reasonable amount of caloric intake is through the school breakfast and lunch programs and many of those students are the ones who would find it the easiest to get to school because the infrastructure supports the denser, central part of the county the most.
Not to mention the kicker here... remember, the school has a minimum number of hours... except when they say they don't. So cancelling for everyone almost certainly at this point (we plan for 5 days and are already at 8) means less net days of instruction for everyone, rather than less net days of instruction for only the subset of the population who can't get to school for roads, cold, etc.
We're getting the polar vortex next week. If we didn't have school this week with NO PRECIPITATION and 20F, there's no way we're having school next week where I'm seeing a HIGH of 13F, 14F, and 20F, respectively, on Tuesday onward. If they keep this up, and assuming that the weather is perfect on the 27th, that will mean that my kid will have had
three hours of school in 39 days.
CalgaryTbone wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 5:35 pm
Where I live, temps. below 0 Fahrenheit are common, and 40 below (where Fahrenheit and Celsius meet briefly), is a regular occurrence. They almost never cancel the schools or other events for the cold - maybe when there's a strong wind with that kind of air temperature. Not that big a deal if you dress for it, and don't linger outside.
That's what my wife is used to. She's from a part of Russia where everyone in her school walks to and from school. The daily high is typically around 5F, and she had never had a school cancellation!