+1 If you don’t want to teach, don’t. |
I don’t understand your question. Do you think my DH doesn’t want to pack up his classroom and I don’t want to teach summer school because we are busy? Well, we are busy but that’s not the primary reason. DH has serious health issues. He’s probably not going back if schools reopen 8/31. Meanwhile, he’s trying to teach as much as he can to his juniors before classes end for the year. If you are going to pack you room, you have to do it during a specific slot that coincides with classes so teachers are expected to cancel their classes so they can pack. So he’s busy with his students, but he’s also been told by his doctor to stay out of the building. My school was more liberal with slots so I don’t have to cancel my classes to pack. I’m also tentatively planning to return so I want to know exactly what is packed where. I’m nervous about bringing something home to DH though. I don’t want to teach summer school mainly because of that same concern. He’s immunocompromised. However, I will be busy as well. I have to recertify with the state next year and I need to take 6 grad credits this summer. In addition, MCPS is rolling out a new LMS called synergy that I will have to learn well enough to support my mentees with it. I think it’ll also be a lot of time moving materials from Google Classroom since that platform will be eliminated. But also, I don’t get a full curriculum for one of my courses, so I’ll spend the summer rewriting 180 lessons so they can be done via DL if needed. However, if I didn’t want to teach summer school simply because I didn’t want to teach summer school that would be good enough. Let someone who would need the extra money more have the opportunity. |
I don't understand why you think it's the *teachers* clamoring to keep the schools closed in the fall. |
I’m sure it’s not the case overall but there are definitely some very vocal ones on here complaining about how no one values their lives etc. |
It is incorrect to say that schools are now opening all over the world. Schools are just barely starting to open in a few places. |
Maybe not publically as an individaul because it is a hugely unpopular idea with anyone that isn't a teacher, but the teachers' unions certainly |
Where and when have the teachers' unions been clamoring to keep the schools closed in the fall? |
Sweeden never closed its schools. Very low mortality rate in children. |
In a few places, all over the world. And that's now, too. Not 3 months from now. |
Some countries managed to handle the outbreak better than ours. |
Even with a vaccine it will be years before a population is fully immunized. Moreover, COVID is here to stay; like the flu, it's not going away. Are you proposing closing schools for years? Washington Post article today: COVID 19 will last years even with a vaccine. https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/05/27/coronavirus-endemic/ |
Are teachers as concerned about grocery store clerks? What about healthcare workers? Delivery men and women? |
I believe the DC teachers union has said as much. No return to the classroom until there is a vaccine. Nuts. |
That will be years away. I guess it's going to be charter schools from here on out for DC. |
What's crazy is that some people argue that since nursing homes are such high-risk environments, a consequence of this crisis might be that people choose to care for their elderly relatives at home. But multigenerational households were exactly why the virus killed so many people in Italy, and if multigenerational households also mean that schools can't open because that would put the elderly at risk, then what? That doesn't seem like a solution that's fair to kids. |