Best idea! Schools need adults to work in them. |
My neighbor is on the BOE and one in HR Central Office. The first send shis kids off and just slums it out all day every day. He hardly ever gets dressed. The latter has been gone for over 3 MO this. She did a lot of work hiring for the school year and went remote and stays somewhere else, probably with a good view. Shame on them!! Go in to the office like a decent human being. |
There are how many of them vs. the number of teachers/students in a school? |
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From brief interaction with lower-down MCPS administration (coordinators, not executives) it seems as though they ARE filling in.
There may be (and likely is) some distasteful politics involved in the behavior of MCPS leadership to go along with the chaotic conditions that the changing pandemic brings. That they haven't been able to provide good order is part their fault, part the conditions and, to be honest, part ours, since we present little unanimity on which they might base decisions/actions. However, part of the job at the very top is to provide direction despite the presumed negative reactions of some (even of a majority, if the leader properly sees the need). Please remember that the overwhelming bulk of MCPS employees do not have any real say in this matter, at most responsible for providing options to leadership, who may or may not respond to their suggestions. I'd suggest not using too broad a brush when painting a picture of the situation. |
Your comment is not clear. Can you explain what you mean? Are you saying that teachers should stay home because of the millions of people who have died from Covid? Some of whom live on the other side of the world. Or are you saying that everyone should work from home? Nurses, dentists, the guy who stocks shelves at Giant, the postman. Huh. How is that going to work? You might want to give it more thoughts. Some jobs need to be done in person (teaching) and some employees are essential personnel (teachers). Jobs that can be done equally well remotely should be done remotely. That is not the case with educators, especially in elementary schools and preschools. |
Nah, that’s not irony at all. |
The board are elected members, who make cents from this part time gig. Why would they work from an office? They didn’t do it before COVID. They have had in person meetings during the pandemic. Docca is like a 200 years old, do you really want her to leave her house? |
This seems like a very weird way to make excuses for the BOE. |
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Teachers are essential workers, just as grocery store workers are essential workers. Have you been to the grocery store lately? Meat shelves totally empty. Imagine if all grocery store workers decided to not go in because too many people in the stores don't wear the masks properly. If those grocery store workers have ES kids, then those workers will have stay home if we go virtual. Would you be ok not being able to get your groceries?
BOE members can do their jobs virtually. Kids (especially young ones) can barely learn virtually. |
+1 Although it's spot on. Docca should be out there, vocal, doing everything she can to stop in-person until treatments are available. Yet she enjoys working at home while kids bring it home to younger siblings and family elderly? If the schools are so safe and covid is a non-issue, she should eat in the lunchroom of every ES. |
So could parents. |
+1 |
If school is nothing but a daycare, your argument makes sense. But the logical result is that MCPS converts to daycare-mode for hybrid. You don't need the teachers in-person. They can teach remotely and in-person for those who aren't remote can be done with para's and subs, right? |
Then how are there virtual academies for kids K-12 all over the world? So weird. |
Did your dentist work from home for almost a year? Because teachers did. You didn’t like it, but that’s your problem. |