Saturday, January 18, 2025
17.0°F

Late start to school day leaves some parents looking for help

Phil Johnson | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 2 months AGO
by Phil Johnson
| October 31, 2014 11:00 AM

A late start Wednesday to the Libby School District school day has some parents complaining about hitches in their morning routines. Classes at both Libby Elementary School and Libby Middle/High School started at 10:15 a.m. Wednesday, two hours later than usual. 

In past years, schools let out at 1:26 p.m. when teachers underwent in-service training. A committee of school board members, teachers and administrative staff decided to change the schedule earlier this year. Libby Elementary School Principal Ron Goodman said the change was in the interest of student safety.

“A child is less likely to get in trouble at 8 a.m. than at 2 p.m.,” Goodman said. “Before, parents would still be at work until 5 p.m. and the kids would say they were hanging with their friends until 5 p.m. Well, that’s too long. If a kid gets in trouble at 2 p.m., whose trouble is it? Well, they should be in school then.”

While parents no longer have to worry about their children marauding midday around town, some are left with limited morning options. 

“I think this new schedule sucked,” Marcie Thompson, a mother of two district students, said. “I’m a single mom and I have no extra help. My poor sister had to leave her work and pick up the kids.”

Thompson, a pharmacy technician at Libby Drug, said her children slept an extra half hour Wednesday, but were up and moving before mom left the house. 

“They’d still be sleeping if I didn’t get them moving,” Thompson said. “Maybe I should have attended the parent council meeting, but I work five nights a week, too. It threw me for a loop.”

Kallie Decker used her work break at Libby Clinic to take her fourth-grade son, Kael, to school. He spent the first two hours of his morning with mom at work. While Decker was thankful that her place of work allowed the arrangement, she said she was lucky.

“There are employers that might not let a parent do this,” Decker said. “I feel like afternoons are more flexible. I admit that I’m guilty of not attending the council meetings, but I’m a single mom.”

Decker said she learned of the schedule change from an automated voice message sent by the school district. She said she will plan differently for the next teacher improvement day Jan. 28. 

Libby Middle/High School Principal Ruth VanWorth-Rogers said the later start allows students more time to sleep and wake up in the morning. A downside to the early exit format is that students participating in after-school activities had to burn two hours after class let out before starting after-school events. Now, students transition from the classroom as normal. 

While VanWorth-Rogers and Goodman said they had not heard any complaints about the change, they said the topic would be revisited after the school year. 

There are four more scheduled late-start days: Jan. 28, Feb. 25, March 25 and April 29. During shortened days, classes are compressed to 35 minutes from the normal 47 minutes.

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Libby Middle High School switches to remote learning
The Western News | Updated 4 years, 2 months ago
VanWorth-Rogers is approved 6-0, signs $88,096 contract
The Western News | Updated 11 years, 9 months ago

ARTICLES BY PHIL JOHNSON

Mountain pleads not guilty to seven Yaak burglary charges
November 4, 2014 1:10 p.m.

Mountain pleads not guilty to seven Yaak burglary charges

Not guilty, seven times over. That was the plea Monday when Zachary Michael Mountain, 19, was arraigned before District Judge James Wheelis. Mountain faces as many as 140 years in prison for his alleged involvement last year in a string of felony burglaries in the Yaak.

Crace runs toward state rushing lead
September 30, 2014 11:29 a.m.

Crace runs toward state rushing lead

Libby's conference leading rusher puts team on his back

Announcing Libby Loggers football games this year is a predictable endeavor. With the passing game aching from the absence of graduated All-State quarterback Jared Winslow, the Loggers are a committed ground team. Reminiscent of the era when offenses were pleased with three yards and a cloud of dust, the Loggers run game repeatedly rams the ball right into the teeth of the opposing defense.