It'll be painful for lower income families unless their communities organize childcare co-ops.
One side benefit may be in making more conversation about a 4-day work week.
It'll be painful for lower income families unless their communities organize childcare co-ops.
One side benefit may be in making more conversation about a 4-day work week.
Aagrred with this.
It still surprises me that:
I honestly think that the main reason for the male/female become gap is the above. Discrimination exists, but I think it is more an issue of women being more likely to compromise their work life to take care of kids… and therefore being less useful to work… so being paid less for it.
If we ACTUALLY fix that somehow, we’d be much more inclusive and free society.
I just felt like replying.
As for the 4 day thing, I'm interested to see how it works out. In Texas it has resulted in poorer outcomes for children on the whole mostly due to the safe place service schools provide.
Knowing how things always tend to work out. The 4 day work week will be Monday through Thursday and not be helpful at all.
The people on the bottom, at the lowest income level will never have the 4 day work week in their lifetime. That's a middle class dream.
I was worried about the additional per-day time, but the article says it's only an additional 35 minutes. I think this would only work well if childcare was subsidized on the weekday off (under a certain income threshold if it must be that way). I worry about parents finding a way to make sure someone is keeping an eye on their kids otherwise.
Is it because it reduces their chance of dying in a school shooting by 20%?
All the other kids with the pumped up kicks...
It's because Missouri isn't spending enough on schools.
It's a selling point in an era when schools are facing a national teacher shortage.
"The best way is to pay them better," Pallas said, adding that Missouri "ranks basically last" or "next to last in terms of teacher salaries."
In an effort to attract teachers in rural areas, Missouri saw district-wide shifts from five-day to four-day school weeks surge ahead of the 2022 academic year, with roughly 25% of schools moving to the new schedule, according to an online brief by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
And to cap it off, you get to spend more if you need to cover the child care that the school used to provide. On top of school taxes.
For parents who need childcare on Mondays, the district will offer it for $30 a day — a cost that could strain some families.
both the work week and school day should be 3 days with two shifts.
As long as you're not coming for my 1st shift! I can't imagine working any other shift anymore.
I would jump at an early second shift.
Anything that frees young people from that awful system for even a little bit longer...
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