Food booths are going up at Epcot for Festival of the Arts.
Went to WWoS for the runDisney expo. Construction is progressing on the new venue.

Went to WWoS for the runDisney expo. Construction is progressing on the new venue.

I'm going to mostly ageee to disagree. Disney quality is equally in many things and thus overpriced but many items at Disney are now much better quality cottons etc than typical Uniqlo. As far as graphic tees are concerned. I will say this, Uniqlo for the price can't be beat. Better quality... or so much
Just kinda funny how different school calendars can be
Interesting. So many widely different calendars.
I think the regions are embracing the different calendars, in part so families can enjoy vacations at popular destinations while avoiding the peak crowds(not just at Disney).
I'd agree with all of what you've said and appreciate the extra information. The snow days however isn't a northern section of the US thing unless you count north-eastern KS as northern..snow days, usually 5 or 6, was pre-built in at least when I was growing up. I'm sure they still have something of the sort in the districts I'm just too lazy to look it up lol. Snow days were also used for brutal cold (for example negative actual and feels like temp) due to kids standing at the bus stops.I just happened to talk to my mother, who was an Assistant Superintendent of a school district. The master schedule was one of her duties. I mentioned this thread and she chuckled when I asked she ever considered tourism crowds when coming up with vacation dates. She basically said that was never a consideration.
She said that with national holidays and pre-determined standardized testing dates set by the state, there really isn't a ton of wiggle room for which days to take off. To add complexity, she had to get buy-in from multiple unions (teachers, clerical, and custodial) on dates. Smaller districts might also consult with larger regional employers to avoid child-care issues for younger students.
She also mentioned the fact that districts must have a certain number of instructional days. Districts in northern sections of the country may have more days in the school year than the rest of country because they have to consider the possibility of "snow days".
I know in Wisconsin we have 2 "free" snow days. Anything more than that we have to make up. Public schools need 180 days of instruction here.I just happened to talk to my mother, who was an Assistant Superintendent of a school district. The master schedule was one of her duties. I mentioned this thread and she chuckled when I asked she ever considered tourism crowds when coming up with vacation dates. She basically said that was never a consideration.
She said that with national holidays and pre-determined standardized testing dates set by the state, there really isn't a ton of wiggle room for which days to take off. To add complexity, she had to get buy-in from multiple unions (teachers, clerical, and custodial) on dates. Smaller districts might also consult with larger regional employers to avoid child-care issues for younger students.
She also mentioned the fact that districts must have a certain number of instructional days. Districts in northern sections of the country may have more days in the school year than the rest of country because they have to consider the possibility of "snow days".
we saw signs for that at the AKL but werent sure what it was. IM handicapped and any easier way to get to the parks is worth a few dollars. How does that work ? we are goingback in decemberI've only used the express transportation once so far but I loved it. The not having to wait for security is great.
It's currently in its test phase. You can purchase it at the table inside the parks, at guest services, or at your resort concierge. $15 a day or $24 for 7 consecutive days.we saw signs for that at the AKL but werent sure what it was. IM handicapped and any easier way to get to the parks is worth a few dollars. How does that work ? we are goingback in december
My experience in ski country Vermont was exactly the opposite. We have 2 local ski resorts, and more than half the student's parents are employed by the resorts. As a result, they intentionally moved the presidents week break back a week later. The reasoning was that the families could not afford to have their children out of school during that busy week, when they will likely be expected to work more than their typical 40 hours per week.I just happened to talk to my mother, who was an Assistant Superintendent of a school district. The master schedule was one of her duties. I mentioned this thread and she chuckled when I asked she ever considered tourism crowds when coming up with vacation dates. She basically said that was never a consideration.
She said that with national holidays and pre-determined standardized testing dates set by the state, there really isn't a ton of wiggle room for which days to take off. To add complexity, she had to get buy-in from multiple unions (teachers, clerical, and custodial) on dates. Smaller districts might also consult with larger regional employers to avoid child-care issues for younger students.
She also mentioned the fact that districts must have a certain number of instructional days. Districts in northern sections of the country may have more days in the school year than the rest of country because they have to consider the possibility of "snow days".
My son's school doesn't have snow days. If the school is closed due to weather a half day's worth of work is distributed via the school's private portal website. The teacher decides what to give out. It can reading, writing essays, online lectures to watch, textbook work, etc. That counts as a school day and the kids still have time for fun in the snow.
Interesting. I don't think that would work well for many because everyone would need internet access.My son's school doesn't have snow days. If the school is closed due to weather a half day's worth of work is distributed via the school's private portal website. The teacher decides what to give out. It can reading, writing essays, online lectures to watch, textbook work, etc. That counts as a school day and the kids still have time for fun in the snow.
Interesting. I don't think that would work well for many because everyone would need internet access.
My son's school doesn't have snow days. If the school is closed due to weather a half day's worth of work is distributed via the school's private portal website. The teacher decides what to give out. It can reading, writing essays, online lectures to watch, textbook work, etc. That counts as a school day and the kids still have time for fun in the snow.
I know in Wisconsin we have 2 "free" snow days. Anything more than that we have to make up. Public schools need 180 days of instruction here.
Interesting. I don't think that would work well for many because everyone would need internet access.