Are they scared of collecting gifts, too? |
+1 They were protesting when we were DL. My DC's DL was shut down for half a day in May due to an organized refusal to teach. They tried to tell us parents it was a "tech issue". Clearly they think we are stupid. I'm sure everyone's zoom and email is somehow magically connected ![]() And then they were upset about having to do DL at all. Because using the internet is soooo hard for grown people. |
Perhaps you did not read the thread. Many of the parents who are upset have been working throughout the pandemic. Others were remote working for 6 or 8 weeks. |
Are the grocery stores and hospitals in your neighborhood closed? |
Teachers don't want your crappy gifts. Please don't bother. |
I guess you should not have signed your contract. |
I thought this too. Many parent a seem to agree and yet... very few families actually left. |
Is this when Zoom had the huge security issue and schools needed to tighten security? A halfday "teacher protest" over DL seems really improbable. |
No. Unrelated. Also beyond Zoom. |
Teachers have very little input in these decisions. Many schools surveyed teachers and parents and received an array of responses. Many teachers were asked to share health concerns, but the schools were very cagey about how those concerns would be treated. And that was it! My sense is that the schools as institutions over-promised with hybrid/in-person goals for the fall and balked when it came time to deliver. The teachers I know are a bunch of diligent, dedicated folks who pretty much toe the line. The line is being drawn by admin and boards and lawyers. |
But they will threaten to leave!!!!! I am afraid the schools have you by the short and curlies. |
Where are you that teachers are making ANY of these calls? As a private school teacher I thought I was returning in person up until the time the head of school told us in a staff meeting that the admin and board had decided not to open. Blaming teachers is just silly. They have no power. |
I am a parent at a private school and like everyone is pissed and emotional about what my kids are missing out on. 2020 sucks! What I don't see anyone posting about is what the educational experience in these schools will look like if it was in person. The more I thought about it and learned about that the more compelling distance learning with some fun and creative on campus time sounds like the ideal mix. Health concerns are one thing, but I don't want my elementary school kids traumatized and even more frustrated by learning in a bizarre, scary and inhumane environment. I urge everyone to think about the fact that many teachers are raising these concerns not because they are just lazy and scared, but also because they truly do care about our children and their educations. That is why they are teachers! Honestly a lot of you need to grow up and I hope to god you are not parents at my school or at least that without the stress you are under that you have better values and a bigger heart than is demonstrated in many of these threads. I would much rather a teacher in a one-on one online format or in a small group work with my kids on their math and help them work through something than have them isolated six feet away from their teacher and friends completely struggling through something. You think online learning was bad, well I think this would be far worse and would damage the loving relationship my kids have with their school environment. Really think about this situation people. We all want childcare, but separate your anxiety around this totally crappy situation and think about what the in person day to day really looks like and whether your kid would really be jazzed and doing their best work. There is no perfect solution here and nothing will work for every family or every kid. So sorry, but I think it is smart as parents, schools and society to prioritize safety and our shared humanity. |
My son doesn't have a loving relationship with his school environment or really with anyone other than DH and I, because he has autism and is not what would be characterized as high functioning. We need him in school. |
So true, so true. Entitlement attitude has settled in with the some schools’ teachers, and just like welfare, they now feel they deserve these entitlements. |