For Prince George's County, that's when some in person instruction for vulnerable groups can begin to occur. That's been announced since August -- until we are at 10 new cases per 100,000 per day we have been all virtual. If we get down to 5 new cases per 100,000 per day I think we can do hybrid. Here is the CDC's guidance on how risky it is for schools to be open based on new cases, per 14 days, per 100,000. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/indicators.html#thresholds Note that I stated risk in terms of new cases, per DAY. Not per fortnight! So you have to multiply my number by 14. I said that we can open to SOME vulerable students when new cases per day per 100,000 are 10. That wold be 140 per fortnight. That puts you in the orange zone according to the CDC's chart -- higher risk of transmission. So yes, at that stage you could begin bringing absolutely necessary students such as special needs kids. PLEASE NOTE that in MD right now we are at about 40-50 new cases per day per 100,000. We aren't even CLOSE to the 10 we should be at. 50 new cases per 100,000 per day x 14 = 600 new cases per 100,000 per fortnight. On the CDC chart that is RED zone. Greater than 200. HIGHEST risk of transmission. |
Exactly. A routine has been established. It is going to cost MORE money to go hybrid. What is the rush? Why not wait until next school year?
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All of this! The remainder of the school year will result in loss of learning due to the amount of time and stress of teaching and reinforcing new rules and procedures. Academics will not be a priority. Also note that in schools where they have gone hybrid teachers are quitting at higher rates. In districts that are already suffering a teacher shorter with no qualified subs this is going to pose a long term problem that goes beyond DL.
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I agree. |
This part!
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This is the bottom line.
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Our kids are in private this year, and they do (B). It works fine. The class size is about 10-15 in class and 5-10 online. There's a camera in the classroom. Total class size is 25. How many are online varies depending on the situation, like one girl in my daughter's class had her college-aged brother come back for break, so they kept her home on DL for 2 weeks to make sure the brother didn't bring anything. |
If that's the goal, that needs to happen at the state level. I'm completely on board with it, but it makes no sense unless we are all working toward that goal. Some of us are, but we aren't getting anywhere. |
We don't need that as a goal. Schools being open does not contribute to the spread on a large basis. MCPS has been closed for almost a year now, yet the rates in MoCo spiked this fall, _despite_ being closed. Meanwhile, in Western MD where schools were open, the rates also spiked. Other states have had schools open, and there also appears to be no link between schools being open and community spread. |
Rates in Western MD where schools were open were triple or quadruple what they have been in MoCo despite much lower population density, actually. |
Allegheny County was off the charts:
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Allegheny County finally closed schools in November but by then the virus was seeded in the population, and they had Thanksgiving and Christmas to spread it around. Their rates were sky high.
They shut down indoor restaurants eventually which finally helped. |
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The surge in Allegheny County started when indoor dining resumed. They never reopened schools fully and had only bright younger grades back when they transitioned to virtual. Case began rising every week after the Governor allowed indoor dining to resume. It is impossible given the timeline for COVID for the entire surge to have been caused by school reopening.
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No, it isn't impossible. This is how it happens: Aug -Sept. younger Kids return to school, a few spread illness (asymptomatic students so it goes undetected) Oct : asymptomatic cases spread, start spreading exponentially. A few spread it to older teens and parents who start to show more symptoms. People say -- see? Kids in elementary school aren't spreading it! November -- spread is widespread in elementary schools and starts getting going with older kids and teens as well. Now we start to pay attention. December -- starts to peak, restaurants shut down. But people gather for holdiays. |