Tuesday, May 31, 2022

2022-2023 NYC SCHOOL CALENDAR IS OUT

The school calendar has finally been released. This is from the DOE website and it is reprinted below from Patch.

Expanded Calendar with staff return dates:



Student-Parent Version



September

  • September 8: First day of school
  • September 15: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for elementary schools, and Pre-K Centers
  • September 22: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for middle schools and D75 schools
  • September 26: Rosh Hashanah, schools closed
  • September 27: Rosh Hashanah, schools closed
  • September 29: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools

October

  • October 5: Yom Kippur, schools closed
  • October 10: Italian Heritage / Indigenous Peoples' Day, schools closed

November

  • November 3: Afternoon and Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for elementary schools; students in these schools dismissed three hours early.
  • November 8: Election Day, students do not attend school
  • November 9: Afternoon and Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for middle schools and D75 schools; students in these schools dismissed three hours early.
  • November 11: Veterans Day, schools closed
  • November 17: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools
  • November 18: Afternoon Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools; students in these schools dismissed three hours early.
  • November 24: Thanksgiving, schools closed
  • November 25: Thanksgiving Recess, schools closed

December

  • December 26: Christmas Day (observed), schools closed
  • December 27–30: Winter Recess, schools closed

January

  • January 2: New Year's Day (observed), schools closed
  • January 16: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day, schools closed
  • January 24–27: Regents Administration
  • January 30: Professional Development Day for high schools and 6–12 schools; students in these schools do not attend.
  • January 31: Spring Semester begins

February

  • February 20–24: Midwinter Recess, schools closed (includes Presidents Day and Lincoln's Birthday (observed)

March

  • March 9: Afternoon and Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for elementary schools
  • and Pre-K Centers; students in these schools dismissed three hours early.
  • March 16: Afternoon and Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for middle schools and D75 schools
  • March 23: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools
  • March 24: Afternoon Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools; students in these schools dismissed three hours early.

April

  • April 6: First Day of Passover, schools closed
  • April 7: Second Day of Passover / Good Friday, schools closed
  • April 8–14: Spring Recess, schools closed
  • April 21: Eid al-Fitr, schools closed

May

  • May 4: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for elementary schools and Pre-K Centers
  • May 11: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for middle schools and D75 schools
  • May 18: Evening Parent-Teacher Conferences for high schools, K–12, and 6–12 schools
  • May 29: Memorial Day, schools closed

June

  • June 8: Anniversary Day/Chancellor's Conference Day for staff development;
  • students do not attend.
  • June 9: Clerical Day for elementary schools, middle schools, K–12 schools, and
  • standalone D75 programs; students in these schools do not attend.
  • June 14–23: Regents Administration (excluding June 19, when schools are closed)
  • June 19: Juneteenth, schools closed
  • June 27: Last day of school for students

10 comments:

  1. Just shows us, how there is nothing crazy about the calendar, so really no excuse to wait this long

    ReplyDelete
  2. I find it so strange that most teachers were freaking out over the calendar but don't seem to give two shits that contract negotiations are going on right now. We all know that we have to work 180 days between Sept-June. The contract issue is way more important if you ask me. Are we going to get screwed? Repeat of 2005 contract? Is the negotiation process going to be transparent? These are my concerns and should be the concerns of all teachers.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Too many teachers are short sighted morons. Take a grand up front to get screwed on the back end. Oooohhhh the calendar is out. We deserve every beating we get.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I want to go on record that the 05 contract was brought to us by weingarten. Mulgrew isn’t great, but weingarten was worse.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Both sold their souls and our butts.
      Hope we still can have a long life after the retirement, given that our sleeves&arms were also sold. For a bunch of BigPh sock.

      Delete
  5. The school calendar is out. No surprises for the typical school year unless they wanted to add on newly created additional days —like September 31, November 31 etc.
    The question will be —with upcoming contact negotiations—what happens with the length of the NYC school day —and will the state permit a longer school year in NYC—which would be tied into any robust raises for teachers—along with keeping their current healthcare programs.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I was there for 2005. Randi sucked but so does Mulgrew and I don't put anything behind him in what he can mess up.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Calendar is out, when are budgets coming out? Will there be mass excessing again?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Budgets by Friday apparently

    ReplyDelete
  9. OMG our calendar finally came out. Where was this hysteria when we had no interest for 10 years for money we were owed? Or the madness of what we need to negotiate for this next contract. Any idiot can figure out when school starts based off labor day, it is nice to see it's out but means absolutely nothing, almost like our voice we have in this shitty union.

    ReplyDelete

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