If you change your mind at the last moment are you guaranteed that your kid will be in all the same classes as Fall Semester? |
The survey wasn't intended to decide whether or not to offer hybrid. Hybrid is coming if the metrics allow. The survey was intended to give schools the info they need to plan for hybrid. I don't think it benefits the schools to have lots of people switching after they propose the hybrid plan. |
I don't think you're guaranteed that whether you choose distance, hybrid, or choose hybrid and change your mind. My impression was that everything was up for grabs in the second semester, depending on how many students choose distance vs. hybrid at each school, or even at each grade level. |
+1 Back asap, also went to camp and distance learning hub. No cases anywhere they have been. Active boys 9 and 7 y/o. |
You aren't guaranteed the same teachers, no matter what. |
Yeah, but I can't really tell if it's worth the risk for our family until they tell me what it will look like. There are too many variables in the types of classes the kids may be offered at any given school, and our school is pretty outdated, with crowded hallways, few windows, and bad HVAC. I'm concerned that spread in middle and high schools seems to be more common than in elementary, so I want to be sure my kid is actually going to get something out of it before we assume that risk. I'm sure I'd feel differently if it were elementary school, where DL is much harder for working parents to manage and in-person school seems to show much less spread. But if half my middle school kid's classes will be the support model, they can do that more effectively from the safety of their own bedroom, with a much shorter school day and less stress. Why risk a classroom full of maskless kids eating lunch together, only to sit and stare at a computer screen for half the day just like she does at home? And if her in-person magnet classes will be taught by a random sub, how is that better than DL with their experienced teacher? She doesn't love Zoom classes, but likes her teachers well enough that she'd probably prefer to stay with them. So we chose hybrid, figuring that leaves her the option to stay virtual if it turns out there really aren't many benefits to the hybrid model we're ultimately offered. I get that it's a catch-22—that they can't plan until they have the numbers, but the numbers won't be accurate until they have a detailed plan—but we had to do what's best for our family based on the information we were given before the survey. |
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Regarding the metrics for return in person, just saw that the BOE also requested reconsideration of the numbers - hopefully to make them less stringent and thus more likely that kids can go back in person (fingers crossed)
Oh, and I selected hybrid for my 5th, 6th and 9th graders. On the day the survey came out |
| DL for my kids. |
Right. I don’t think many people realize just how long it will take to reach the 5 per 100k benchmark either. It could take well into the next school year. Hope they reconsider but that’s what we have to go by right now. |
I think what’s most interesting to me about the survey results is how many parents would still not be comfortable sending their kids back even when those very strict metrics are met. |
I saw a poster claim here the other day we were there back in September. If that's true and a vaccine is going to be rolled out any day, we should have no problem getting back to where we were by next fall. |
We were close but I don’t think quite there. So will e correct me if I’m wrong. And remember that would still only get you hybrid. They want <1 to resume full time in person, right? And no kids will be vaccinated yet. |
| Hybrid for my 9th grader in a magnet. She doesn't know anyone and would be much better in DL if she had a handful of people she knew more intimately. |
I don't think that many people realize that benchmarks are arbitrarily set and can be changed by the people who set them. |
That poster was wrong. We have not been there since the start of the pandemic. |