Very well said. |
Totally agree |
The most sensible post so far. But to the society at large, the harms from school closing would be way greater than the potencial harm from Covid-19. |
I will send my kids when the school opens to the extent that is permitted. My kids miss school.
It's interesting to me that you all think schools will close again if teachers start spreading it. I doubt they will close schools again quickly. At that point, offices will be opening, so teachers will not be the only workers seeing co-workers again. Offices will put people in far closer proximity than schools (most DC workers are in cubes) so I think by the fall we know more about where we are at. |
Have you read the OSSE guidelines? If a student or teacher has been exposed to Covid (identifier through contact tracing, eyc) that classroom along with any adults or students who interacted with those in the room or the room itself must quarantine for 14 days. How long do you think it is going to take before someone is exposed (parent or teacher) before the classrooms start shutting down? If a parent becomes exposed through work that e tire classroom plus all staff who were exposed to that classroom will be quarantined. It’s not going to take long. |
I agree that they would not shut all schools down again if there is an outbreak. They would shut down individual schools for a limited amount of time, which is the sensible thing to do. Schools being open would be the status quo, and that is a powerful force. Our problem right now is that schools being closed is the status quo, and they are afraid of opening them again and see what happens. Teachers are scared to go back to work, (some) parents are scared to send their kids, because everyone has been put under the impression that closing schools was necessary to keep everyone safe, mounting evidence that kids are not significant vectors of Covid notwithstanding. They rung a giant bell in March that they now can't unring. Michael Osterholm warned of this outcome back then when he wrote an article skeptical of a national lockdown. |
Hi! Well I guess I need to start identifying myself before posting. I am a female POC who is in her mid to late 40s with pre-existing health conditions. I am a teacher in a Ward 3 school while living in Ward 7. My children attended their neighborhood school before attending Hardy. One is currently at Banneker and the other is at Walls. You don’t get to tell me I am privileged and don’t care about OUR communities. I do care about the community. I live in my community. I see what is happening to our children. I see what is happening to our families. I see the toll this is taking. I also see the trauma of children with dying parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles. I see the children scared that more of their family will die. I see the heartache of a community in mourning. I am not trying to keep our community down. I am making sure we don’t allow some white Social Justice warriors who suddenly care about our communities to kill us. You are killing us while pretending to care. Help us get better healthcare. Help us get a Trauma center in Ward 8. Help us get more grocery stores. Help us get safer and cleaner housing. Don’t tell me I don’t care about my community. Don’t you dare. |
In my area, two large daycares have already closed for two weeks because of student and teacher outbreaks. How will any school with more than 100 kids open for a sustained amount of time before outbreaks begin? It would be more disruptive than just planning for virtual learning in the fall. |
And what if it’s not just the fall? We can’t count on a vaccine to bail us out quickly. We need to figure out a way to open schools before that happens. |
This is so interesting and I think it hits the nail on the head about closed being the status quo right now. I hadn’t thought about it that way. It makes me sad that nobody is thinking about the needs and wellbeing of kids in any of this. |
Nothing will ever shut down like it did last time, no one is gonna follow the rules the train has left the station and it has no driver! |
Why are we still arguing? DCPS is 100% doing hybrid. What model remains to be seen but it WILL NOT BE FULL IN PERSON EVERYDAY.
If we are truly worried about underprivileged children in parents let's lobby for DC to put trauma centers, libraries, more affordable grocery stores, more job training, etc. I mean really at the end of the day the parents also really need help and that's really not the job of the school. To fully help children I am a firm believer in helping parents as well. Idk how many times as a teacher I have actually had to be a therapist for parents. So much so that I am now getting a masters in counseling so I can actually help. Students are 100% my main priority but I found so many of my students were not making as much progress as they could due to parents. AND I am not blaming them, we are all a product of our environments, etc. |
Thanks for this. Needed perspective and fwiw I think you are absolutely right. |
We live in a failed state. Life won’t be back to normal until massive vaccinations. |
I agree. I desperately want kids back in school but I fear for the unpredictable and constant shut downs that will happen (not to mention potential spread but I’m putting that aside for purposes of this post). One of the major benefits of having schools closed was that it provided Pressure on employers and leverage for employees to negotiate working from home. That allowed them to deal with untenable situation of kids being home from school as well as work exposure risks. Having random classrooms close here and there does not provide the Same leverage, likely leaving many workers in even more difficult positions with respect to childcare and work. |