Sounds like a good program to me.![]()
In many cases the schools are forced to do too much. It's impossible to completely focus on the three Rs when Johnnie and Susie can't behave and don't have the skills necessary to succeed in the classroom and in life. Unfortunately "another group" doesn't exist for many students. The school environment is their only hope.

That is 4 1/2 hours for 3 very important things. You have the kids for approximately 7 hours. 1/2 hour for lunch and you still have two left for science, history and a special. Piece of cake. I suspect the children will be abundantly better off to have that time to be physically active during the day. It should be interesting how it affects attention span, etc. You should be grateful for this rather than complaining about it.
OP - I understand exactly where you are coming from.
While I agree that at risk kids need intervention, it is once again irritating that the kids who do things right and the parents who do things right have no programs to boost them up or to help them get ahead and if they do they are rarely 3 days a week and almost never FREE.
Its all about the losers in society and the good kids are left to their own devices.

OP - I understand exactly where you are coming from.
While I agree that at risk kids need intervention, it is once again irritating that the kids who do things right and the parents who do things right have no programs to boost them up or to help them get ahead and if they do they are rarely 3 days a week and almost never FREE.
Its all about the losers in society and the good kids are left to their own devices.

Thank you for telling me how to do my job. Are you a teacher? Have you had classes in child development? You'd be surprised how quickly those minutes go by. The point is, they are taking away more and more of our instructional time, and yet we are expected to fit in the same amount of material. Add in the scheduled health screenings, required assessments, transition time (bathroom breaks, walking to and from specials, etc), counseling, etc. etc. and the time slips by before you know it. I'm not saying we need to take away recess completely, but at the rate our state is handing down these mandates, there will be no time left for true instruction.
In my classroom we are very active. My kids do all kinds of physical activities to learn, but that apparently does not count toward their 90 minutes a day. I do not appreciate being told what I should or should not be.
I will say again that I'd bet grant money that the school sees an improvement in behavior and those beloved test scores. As far as being told what to do, well get over it. There are guidelines in every job I can think of.OP - I understand exactly where you are coming from.
While I agree that at risk kids need intervention, it is once again irritating that the kids who do things right and the parents who do things right have no programs to boost them up or to help them get ahead and if they do they are rarely 3 days a week and almost never FREE.
Its all about the losers in society and the good kids are left to their own devices.

OP - I understand exactly where you are coming from.
While I agree that at risk kids need intervention, it is once again irritating that the kids who do things right and the parents who do things right have no programs to boost them up or to help them get ahead and if they do they are rarely 3 days a week and almost never FREE.
Its all about the losers in society and the good kids are left to their own devices.
I am a college professor who works with teaching students. Good enough for you?I will say again that I'd bet grant money that the school sees an improvement in behavior and those beloved test scores. As far as being told what to do, well get over it. There are guidelines in every job I can think of.
Education comes from more then just multiplication and reading. Some of these kids - children with Special Needs, children with learning issues, children that come from less then stellar homes - sometimes just need a more positive experience.
If you do not have a positive opinion of yourself then no matter what you do - you never feel good about who you are and what you are learning. These are kids we are talking about here that are disadvantaged in some way.
For my child his entire school day just tells him that he is not good enough no matter how hard he tries. We have an after school program (that happens to be open to anybody) and what they do there has helped his self esteem a great deal.![]()
People should be greatful that their child does not qualify and thankful that there are programs in place to help children feel better about themselves and education.![]()
Wow. That's some post. I can't tell if you are arguing that the program should be available for free to all students or that it shouldn't be available to any. Of course, either option would mean that it wasn't available to any because it would become too expensive if everyone was included. Therefore, I guess you are arguing that there should be no programs to help these kids.But isn't that the way it is all the way around? Default on a morgage and get a lower rate while the rest of us suckers pay what we contracted for. Pay on your credit card monthly and get slapped with a fee because you are too reliable. No car can;t afford one? Well we'll get you that and a cell phone free of charge (if you live in Ma). I know what the op is saying. As a teacher I see first hand that these programs are great but what about the kid who does not qualify? When do we give him somthing. Just becuase those of us can pay our bills and control our kids does not mean that we can pay for the little extras that might take a student to the next level. My son signed up for a Kaplan SAT program which was worth 800.00 at his hs which was being given away for free to 30 kids. I was not poor enough to get it for free or rich enough to afford it. So he lost out. It did not mean he did not need it or could not have benefitted from it. I live in both worlds and see that inequality comes in all forms. My son is working his ... (0ver 40 hours a week)off to go to a state school .....a HUGe state school and he is one of only 800 students who pay admission. OH and he is not living on campus like the subsidised kids...he cannot afford it and neither can I!
My guess is that you are not understanding why Johnny is having the problems in the first place.(bolding mine) Then why in the world are you keeping him in this school if it does nothing but tear him down?
From the OP:
Criteria to qualify to be in The Edge include:
The student has been retained in their school career.
The student failed two or more core classes in the previous school year.
The student has attendance issues that have significant impact on the student's success.
The student has behavior problems and referral issues.
So Johnny is told that if he passes all of his classes and doesn't have attendance or behavior issues that he won't get to come back to the program. How hard will Johnny try to pass and attend if he knows his sports, games, and arts and crafts will be taken away if he does? My guess is not very hard.
(bolding mine) Then why in the world are you keeping him in this school if it does nothing but tear him down?
From the OP:
Criteria to qualify to be in The Edge include:
The student has been retained in their school career.
The student failed two or more core classes in the previous school year.
The student has attendance issues that have significant impact on the student's success.
The student has behavior problems and referral issues.
So Johnny is told that if he passes all of his classes and doesn't have attendance or behavior issues that he won't get to come back to the program. How hard will Johnny try to pass and attend if he knows his sports, games, and arts and crafts will be taken away if he does? My guess is not very hard.
My guess is that you are not understanding why Johnny is having the problems in the first place.
That to me as a parent is frustrating. My son has student loans because he is not poor or at risk or special needs or a minority or the child of someone who is poor or at risk....he is the child of middle class working parents whose college fund got slammed like everyone elses.
The system does not treat our children equitably and the "losers" get way more breaks, help etc. I don't happen to agree with this, I think it is wrong.