+1 |
So NOW you all care about the achievement gap. I've been on DCUM for years and have rarely if ever seen any of you worried about students of color in this city, or the inequities that exist in DCPS. You bring it up now to somehow support your case that schools need to reopen. Here is how out of touch you are. While Ward 3 and other non-title 1 schools have up to 80% of parents basically kicking down the doors for schools to reopen, the reality is completely different in Wards 7 & 8. Most parents here do not want their children to return to in-person learning. I know of a school where under 10% were interested. Why? Because they have directly seen the impact of this virus on their communities. While you all fret and think of strategies to secretly travel to Florida to see grandma for Christmas, my students are thinking of the loved ones they have lost due to the virus. You are living in a completely different world and a completely differently reality. Teachers (WTU), the vast majority of whom are Black in this city, see the virus for what it is. We should be focused on making virtual learning better for students. We should be focused on keeping everyone healthy and safe until a vaccine is available for all of us. This is far from ideal but it is the reality we are living in. If you are being negative around your children they will feed off of you! We are all in the struggle together. |
| No. We should follow the science. Which strongly recommends reopening schools. |
VL has been a crushing failure for both my DCPS kids and the DCPS kids I teach. I'm glad you are having a better experience and/or believe it's working - anecdotally we both have our own perspectives. I worry a lot more about my students. When we are back in school I will do all I can to catch them up but believing in, and continuing to support a model that isn't working is too amoral for me. |
I work in DC Medicaid and call and visit families in wards 7 and 8 all day long. The tragedy is that although the families in these wards do not want to return to school, most of their kids are currently not receiving ANY education. I have hundreds of patients (and it would be thousands if I had thousands of patients) who are not logging in at all. It's a completely lost year. I will say the thinking behind not wanting to return is two fold: 1)many of these families have seen people die from the virus. 2)many of these families do not value education to the degree that people in ward 3 do. This is not racist or classist to say. It's reality. Under the best of circumstances (pre-Covid) I spent dozens of hours per week convincing people to send their kids to schools. A common call is "oh, why isn't XX in school?" Answer "Well, she didn't feel like going so I kept her home" "For two weeks?" "Well, she's 10. I wanted to give her a break". Or similar. Obviously this wouldn't happen in most ward 3 households. It just wouldn't. And yet it happens every day in other wards. I spent a TON of time educating parents on the importance of consistent school. It's very, very difficult for parents because they never had this modeled to them. Do you know how many parents in DC have less than a high school education? A TON! The majority of the ones I call. It's very difficult for people to value what their parents didn't value to them. |
NP. Biden's designated education secretary vehemently disagrees with you. This "you hypocrite don't really care about low-income kids" is a diversion tactic to suit your own ends. It doesn't matter if the PP *really* cares about the achievement gap -- as an educator, YOU should care, and you should heed the expert warnings of how DL, now matter how perfected, is failing these kids. Their parents may be afraid to send them back, but that doesn't change the fact that the learning loss is going to impact these kids for years to come. |
What’s left to improve about DL?! DCPS’s software set-up is solid, and my kids’ multiple teachers (2 kids x departmentalization) are doing a great job. And yet it still sucks. DL will never be — can never be — adequate for most elementary students. |
Thank you for this important perspective. |
Let me guess...you’re safely working from home yet pushing for others to return in-person. |
DP: My husband has to go into work every day, with other people, and has been doing it this whole time. We both think schools should reopen in February, with sensible precautions. |
It really doesn't sound like the PP has a WFH job... You are grasping at straws. |
Just another desperate attempt to deflect instead of confronting the issue. |
No, I'm in the community daily and attend appointments with patients. I was at CNMC and GUH yesterday. Today I'm home making calls and doing paperwork. I've been in countless (50+?) doctor's offices and hospitals since March. No positive Covid test yet (knock on wood--I've been tested 3 times) and I'm hoping to be vaccinated next week. |
If Covid won’t spread in small classrooms with unmasked children as they eat breakfast and lunch together then it won’t spread in your offices either. Everyone should return to in-person work. |
That’s an asinine argument. The whole point is to minimize contacts between people as much as reasonable without causing greater harm than the virus. If people can work effectivle from home, they should. That’s good for the whole community. But school at home is significantly less effective and incurs substantial other risks for children. For most kids, the risks of DL are greater than the risks of COVID spread in a properly-controlled environment. |