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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Economist- Let them learn- The risks of keeping schools closed far outweigh the benefits"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die. There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher. The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts. If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment? [/quote] I’m shocked to hear schools don’t have soap in the bathrooms. That being said I am CERTAIN parents or even strangers would be more than happy to donate to the school if that’s so it takes to reopen. I don’t have kids but I’d gladly restock your school singlehandedly! Sadly I do think there are some teachers who don’t want to reopen at all if they have to take any risk whatsoever and there still getting paid. They should feel more sense of responsibility for the future of our children. Imagine if our healthcare workers refused to help patients until some long list of demands were met. Teachers play just as big a role in the (social, intellectual, emotional) health of our society as healthcare workers do. [/quote] Every school year, along with paper and pencils and whatnot on the supply list, parents are asked to send in tissues and purell and Clorox wipes. On a normal year parents provide this type of supply because schools don’t have it. Now when Clorox wipes are nowhere to be found, how WILL the community provide it? And teachers are not asking for paid leave off—they are trying to work from the safety of their home—online learning is NOT ideal, I have no doubt of that. Teachers were working hard during the spring. Teachers want their students to succeed. They’re doing their best in a crappy time amidst their own anxieties and family struggles. [/quote] Please. Teachers were NOT working hard during the spring. Many weren’t working at all. [/quote]
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