Recent comments in /f/vermont

notabeljustcain OP t1_j8illqs wrote

Building is 50 years old, floor plans have changed a few times in that time.

10k sqft, interior/exterior only. No amenities.

Father is an architect out of state, I want to get the plans for to him to do a future state layout.

Location is out in the Mad River Valley if you are interested. PM me.

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NoMidnight5366 t1_j8iect5 wrote

Wake up. Yes there are bad dogs. I love dogs. Support saving them and getting them to a loving home. But there are dogs that can be aggressive and dangerous-I get really concerned when I hear animal shelters tout how they are a no kill shelter because it means they have prejudiced their own assessment of the dogs safety. And that is dangerous to the general public.

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Jerry_Williams69 t1_j8icp6i wrote

"Probably a day of CAD at most..."

Famous last words. People who don't do CAD tend to greatly underestimate how much time a CAD project will take.

That being said, is AutoCAD the best option? What are your goals? If you want to layout renovations or landscaping, programs like Chief Architect might be a better fit. Base model program is like $100 and is super easy to use.

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sneakpeekbot t1_j8icd8b wrote

Here's a sneak peek of /r/wmnf using the top posts of the year!

#1: What an embarrassing response by the hiking community
#2: Alright, which one of you nut cases was this today??! | 28 comments
#3: Felt a bit 'out of this world' on Mount Moosilauke this morning | 14 comments


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1

Primary-Cap-3147 OP t1_j8ibj7r wrote

As a parent, is there a way you would go about handling a bullying problem? Like if your kid was getting targeted, and the administration refused to do anything about it- how would you handle the situation? Or if your kid felt like they couldn't learn in a classroom where the teacher had to constantly divest their attention from teaching to address the specific behavioral problems of certain students?

These seem like extremely common scenarios, but admittedly most of this comes from what I'm reading online, or the occasional conversation with parents in public play areas/teacher friends. It's all anecdotal, but I've really not heard a single positive thing from anyone's experience. I'd mostly be worried about my kid thinking the real world operated like these schools, where the most outlandish behaviors receive the most resources with no accountability.

I guess I'm hoping that the horror stories I hear about are just the most extreme examples being expressed by the most dissatisfied teachers. Like the Teaching subreddit would make you think public schools are some dystopian hells cape. I've not read a single positive story coming from it.

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