One correction, which I'm sure was just an inadvertent error, All Saints Day is, of course, 1 November.
I have heard that not all dioceses have transferred Ascension Thursday to Sunday, but I'll be darned if I can find out which ones. It started, according to what I've read, in Los Angeles and was found to be so popular that it quickly spread. As of of few years ago, it was nearly universal in the U.S. Anyone know a diocese in the U.S. that Ascension Thursday was not transferred this past May?
Also, the U.S. has a rule that removes any obligation to attend Mass if the Holy Day falls on a Saturday or Monday because it's too confusing to Conciliar Catholics to know when to go to Mass since the creation of the Saturday afternoon Mass that supposedly fulfills the Sunday obligation. If the Holy Day is on Saturday, does Saturday afternoon Mass count for the Holy Day or the Sunday? If the Holy Day is on Monday, what about Sunday afternoon Masses? Well, golly, Guber, we just don't know, so don't worry about it. This is the U.S. Conciliar bishops' official law. The exception to that is Christmas Day. There was an exception for the Immaculate Conception as well, but I don't know if that exception is still in effect.
I don't think Catholic doctrine prohibition of servile work on Holy Days applies to the intellectual work of instructing the ignorant since that is also a corporal work of mercy. So there should not be any scruples about teaching children on a Holy Day.