The handiest part about growing up in Michigan, besides my pet wolverine, was the abundance of snow days. But a college district in Ohio is threatening to destroy the sacred snow day by making kids learn. On the web.
A snow day, for those of you’re unfortunate enough to have grown up in states without that fine type of precipitation, is a day on which school is cancelled as a result of inclement weather, usually with regards to snow or ice rendering the roads unsafe for travel. They hold a distinct place in young imaginations for lots reasons. First, snow days were usually declared early inside the morning, so you’d fall asleep thinking you’d have school the following day and wake up with this excellent surprise, an entire day of freedom bestowed upon you prefer a gift. That could be welcome on any occasion, nevertheless it was made all of the better by the undeniable fact that you may usually expect there being an obscene amount of snow for you and your mates to trample across, tunnel through, or pack into snowballs within the day. Snow days always just gave the impression of they offered infinite possibilities, a singular promise that was explored at length in a feature length film called Snow Day , released in 2000, which was unfortunately not that good, if memory serves me correct.
But in keeping with the AP, Mississinawa Valley Schools in Darke County, Ohio, a district that serves an enormous rural area, is testing a new program that threatens to get rid of all that-those epic neighborhood snowball fights and towering snow fortresses-by making kids learn online during snow days. The Ohio Department of Education has already lessen the number of ” calamity days” districts are allowed to declare from five to 3 this year, and the Mississinawa Superintendent Lisa Wendel says that online learning can assist students prepare for faculty, where classes with online components are increasingly common. You know what else is common in college? Skipping class. ” I’ll provide you with my snowballs,” I might tell them if I were a Mississinawa Valley School student, ” if you pry them from my cold mittened fingers.” [ Washington Post ]
Image credit: gsbrown99
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