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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "WaPo on the mental health crisis students are experiencing"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] WaPo’s reporting on this, and anything to do with schools and childhood development, is subpar. Take with a grain of salt. [/quote] How so? Why is it subpar?[/quote] They just meant they don't want schools open, and WaPo has heroically IMO been taking a pro-children stance on this since the beginning, with a lot of reporting on damage to kids and learning, and also a pro-science stance, with a lot of reporting on the consensus that schools are safe for kids. [/quote] Pro science is pro children... all the data shows kids should be in school.[/quote] Except not anymore. https://www.wsj.com/articles/europes-schools-are-closing-again-on-concerns-they-spread-covid-19-11610805601 I’m not posting this to say schools shouldn’t open. But can we please stop with the “all the data says” nonsense? Because the data on children and Covid is rapidly changing, most especially with the new strain.[/quote] The data on Covid is changing and we should be worried about the new strains. The data on kids and DL is not changing. If anything, the new strains and some of this concerning data about spread in schools should be lighting a fire under us to figure out a real solution. Indefinite distant learning is not a real solution. Here are some actual solutions that would actually help us address all of our problems (both mitigating spread as much as humanly possible while also getting children what they need, particularly at the elementary level): -- Outdoor school. Why is there not a plan in place? We need tents, we need jackets and cold weather gear, we need to change curriculums to accommodate it. We need to rework the school calendar. Why is this not even on the table? It is a obvious solution to several problems at once. -- Open the damn windows. Same idea. Why did we sit around discussing air purifiers for months on end when we could have opened windows. And I know not all schools in DC have windows that open. Are we changing that? We should. -- Half day school. This one is harder because it doesn't address the childcare issue for some people. But it solves a bunch of other stuff and the childcare piece could be addressed in other ways. Half day school with open windows, then outdoor aftercare, for instance. If DL has taught me anything, it's that kids really don't need to be sitting in chairs focused on learning for 8 hours a day or even close to it. But in-person instruction during those few hours would be light years more effective than staring at a screen. Light years. And not just from an academic standpoint. I honestly think that interacting with a teacher via a screen has been detrimental to my child's mental well-being. What else? I am tired of people saying "Well, Covid so we can't do anything." No. Covid, so we need to do something else. We have tried DL. It is not a longterm solution, not for most kids. They deserve better.[/quote] Well said, all of it. Excellent examples of actual resilience.[/quote] I haven't gotten through the thread past this point, but please please please submit these comments to the city council and osse. In fact, maybe many of us should do so.[/quote]
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