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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "honest question - what do we do with our kids after May 29?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This is great. The Economist objects to keeping schools shut even as lock down restrictions ease up. https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/04/30/when-easing-lockdowns-governments-should-open-schools-first?cid1=cust/ednew/n/bl/n/2020/04/30n/owned/n/n/nwl/n/n/AP/463610/n[/quote] Understood, but this article also takes very little consideration towards the health risks posed to adults working in schools. This article seems to insinuate that teachers should put their health (and the health of their families) at risk for the students they teach. I get that there is no easy solution. I get that children need and deserve an education. But getting teachers unions to agree to what this article suggests is a long shot. [/quote] I feel for teachers, but I don't quite understand what makes them so special as compared to doctors, nurses, PAs, EMS techs, transit workers, garbage collectors, mail men, policemen, fire men, grocery store employees, etc, etc. If all of those other people have to work, why shouldn't teachers? Why would the union get a veto over teachers working as per their agreed contracts any more than all other essential workers do? School for kids is essential in my mind. More essential than some things getting treated as essential now and WAY more essential than some things that are part of the phased re-entry plans. FWIW, I'm all for government accommodations in particular high risk cases (for instance by extending disability eligibility), but that not the same thing as saying that no teachers have to work.[/quote] That fact that you, and so many parents on here, don’t think that teachers are working right now is the frustrating part. My colleagues and I ARE working.[/quote] I have no doubt that teachers are doing some work. Some may even be doing more work than usual. They are obviously not, as a rule, able to teach as effectively however. Not all doctors can switch to telemedicine; in fact, the majority can’t. Maybe there are some settings where high risk teachers can provide good enough online schooling, but the average K-5 DCPS classroom is not that setting.[/quote]
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