Actually 3 charters have been approved by OSSE and the PSCB to offer online school with no medical documentation necessary. Not sure why OSSE approved their request (for no medical waiver) but not DCPS. |
Which ones? |
Given that that’s not going to happen, the way for you to separate your kid from “those kids” is to keep them home. How hard is it to get into Friendship Online? FWIW, I will not consent to testing because my kid has sensory issues and is very afraid of it, but I will otherwise do my best not to have my kid be contagious, with Covid or anything else. The only risk we will be taking is school, so if we had Covid, it would most likely have come from there. Not everyone who doesn’t opt into testing is careless about Covid. |
I think it’s kind of unreal too. Disappointed. |
As far as I have heard, DCPS did not apply for a waiver. Which probably means that the mayor did not want there to be one. |
to be clear, I am disappointed that the charters (including KIPP) pursued an online option and OSSE approved it. DC kids deserve better than DL. |
Thank you for sharing, and for clarifying that #notallparents , I guess. I think in this pandemic emergency, kids who cannot be tested because of neuropsychiatric reasons should be given the option of Virtual Academy since their special needs makes then unable to not be a risk to their peers. There should be flexibility in the self-contained classrooms, as well. |
No, sorry. My kid needs in person school. We will test if there is known exposure or symptoms. But we will not subject her to the constant worry of whether she will be pulled for asymptomatic testing. We actually discussed this with both the teacher and the student support staff at our school this spring. You are the one who should look into the virtual option if a kid not opting into random asymptomatic testing is so threatening to you. |
The PP cannot possibly be for real. Kids with SN are the ones who need IPL the most. |
Yeah, maybe. But this is a global medical emergency, and it's so obvious that I'm trying to explain that testing should be the norm, not the optional extra. Her jumping in about her SN kid and basically her 'I'll have you know that not all parents are irresponsible" is super-irritating and in the way of the actual dialogue needed, between the yes-test and the no-test normie families. |
What’s super irritating is your assumption that all families who don’t opt into asymptomatic testing are reckless Covid deniers. That’s not going to be true for non-SN families either. And your suggestion that kids with SN should be denied IPL over asymptomatic testing was callous and ridiculous. By the way, the emergency in DC officially ended yesterday. That doesn’t mean that the pandemic is over, but adults in DC are now free to do whatever they want, and the virus hasn’t ever been an emergency for kids. |
Ah, other people's opinions and assumptions and needs! So irritating! Let's continue to troll each other! We need a Back Alley! Still a global medical emergency. |
Your posts really make me relish not signing that form. |
Mine did far better with DL as they got far more support... from us. Its not a need, its a want. With families in activities, socializing, traveling and eating out, it absolutely should be a requirement. |
One would assume that the "sensory" issues/ASD are well documented and then that would be reasonable to opt out. But, if its parent diagnosed sensory, child should be with a mental health therapist and OT to work on those issues and to work on being able to be tested. A lot fo those who opt out are engaging in behaviors that put all our unvaccinated kids at risk. Yes, you can do what ever you want as an adult and child but that doesn't mean you should do it. When you choose to engage in risky behaviors during covid, you put all your kids, not just yours at risk. |