Why not just say you are at Brent? But the PP is correct. You have NO IDEA if everyone is being tested. The school is not allowed to tell you that information. |
- No routine testing. - Kids have the option of going DL, in which case it's synchronous with the real class -- there's a camera in class. Regular class size is 18-20, and I'd say we're at 10-12 in person. - They eat lunch in class. To separate them out even further during this period (since they are unmasked), half the class sits on spread out mats on the floor and the other half at their desks. - Our Covid stats were lower than DC in August, and went up in the fall like elsewhere in our state and the country, and now we're about 2x the level in DC. However, public schools have been closed this whole time so the increase did not appear to be related to schools, as private schools are a tiny % of students in our county. |
OMG!!!! Not OOB!!!!!!!!! Brown kids in my class...noooooooooooooooooooooooo! You disgust me. |
I think blaming the union or DCPS is misguided. Remember, this is a (hopefully) once in a lifetime pandemic and where we are wasn't inevitable. What if back in February we had competent federal leadershipthat got ahead of it, with mass testing contract tracing, funding for school HVAC upgrades, etc. Yes, the goalposts are moving. Yes, the communication has been bad. But these entities were not set up to make these types of massive decisions. Not their expertise. It didn't have to be this way, don't forget that. Instead we got a do-nothing moron who wished it would go away and when it didn't, let everyone else figure it out however they could. |
Careless dismissal of the severity and depth of the problem is a fantastic expression, kudos. It's also an exact description of the posturing by those families who demand schools open while dismissing the pandemic. It is so exact, in fact, that I'm wondering whether you lifted it from a statement to you about your consideration of the pandemic in your demands. |
Huh? I neither said nor did I mean anything to that effect. I was responding to the PP who was rejoicing her classes would be smaller if people leave, which is not how things work. You disgust me with your assumptions about anonymous posters and constantly assuming everyone has racist motives. |
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No, OP, I'd be delighted. Kids won't have received the vaccine in September 2021, and can spread the virus just like adults. |
Nope, came up with it all on my own. And you are mistaken if you assume that people who recognize the depth and severity of the problem of closed schools all dismiss the severity of the pandemic. It is possible to recognize both as significant problems, which have to be handled in balance with each other. That has happened in some places (mostly outside the US), but has not been happening in DC, where schools have remained completely closed. |
Countries outside the US have implemented much more stringent non-pharmaceutical interventions that local, state and federal authorities in the US haven't even attempted convincing us to endorse (and I can see why not). |
This deflection keeps getting repeated. It is not universally true, and what matters is the level of community spread they had while keeping schools open. |
Deflection? That's rich! "Yes, schools are open, but everyone has to be inside of their own homes by 6pm" is not a deflection, it is a massive qualifier that changes everything in the sense that the community's covid transmission "budget" (you know, like a credit ceiling on a 27% APR card - not a real healthy budget) is spent on schools rather than other activities. Other activities that DC residents don't seem willing to abandon. |
It is a deflection because it doesn't apply to a lot of places that kept schools open, and because despite the lack of curfews, DC has had better numbers than lots of places that have managed to keep schools open all fall, with or without curfews. If our numbers are lower yet we keep schools closed, not having a curfew is no excuse for doing so. Other NPIs would lower spread and thus make school opening safer, but ultimately it is the level of existing spread that you have to compare, regardless of how we got there. |
So has Hanover county. |
Not to defend Trump and his incompetent administration, but the truth is that countries like Germany that did have competent pandemic management now also are in a situation with high community spread, in some places much higher than DC. Yet, they managed to have open schools despite that. The difference is leadership at the top that didn't allow teachers unions to run the show, and a populace that didn't demand fancy HVAC upgrades in order to educate their kids. Yes, now German schools are closed since mid-December, but they will not be closed for the rest of the school year like we likely will be. |
Not the PP you're responding to but my kid is in an upper grades Cares class at Brent. We've been in the school community for a decade and have confidence in everybody in charge to keep kids safe in the building. My kid gets tested regularly and we're aware that regular testing is done for all involved. We talk to families with kids in CARES classes in the other grades, neighbors and friends we've known for a long time. Parents exchange info about safety protocols. Nobody involved seems worried that the Brent his hiding positive Covid cases, or not catching cases. Nobody. Please go rain on somebody else's parade. |