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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Safety of teachers and school staff when returning to a school setting in August"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]^^ by social workers, you mean CSFA, right? We’ve gotta start calling a spade a spade. If a child is unsafe in your home it is not a school social worker issue. It is a child & family services issue. [/quote] DP Not teleschooling (or whatever you want to call it) and being in really rough family situations can be two very different things. I have a handful of elementary school kids who are not doing any work because there isn't anyone at home holding them accountable. These are kids that live in stable, safe homes and all appear to be higher SES families. It's shocking to me.[/quote] Same here. I have a lot of kids with parents also at home right now working (just like me) who have stable homes and have done no work at all. I of course have a select few students who lived in unstable homes who are also not doing the work. I do wonder, if the main concern is bringing students to school due to their home environment, why was this not an issue before the pandemic? People are okay with them being at home (or not if they’re homeless) after school and on weekends? This has ALWAYS been an issue, but suddenly now people are using it as an excuse to open up schools when it isn’t safe, probably because they don’t want to deal with their own kids at home.[/quote] Yes, I have parents who are doing nothing to enforce the work. These are wealthy families.[/quote] What? Are you people mental? People can not adequately do their jobs and be full-time teaching. They can probably/ maybe squeeze in 1-2 hrs/ day outside of work. Some are choosing to not do their jobs or to only do the minimum, and that is an extremely valid choice. But many of us actually need our incomes, have meetings all day, and cannot oversee remote learning during the workday. People cannot do two things well at once. There are no good choices here and I feel for all teachers. But blaming parents for being lazy is not the answer and you need to cut it out right now. [/quote] I’m a parent, and I don’t feel these teachers were trying to shame parents. I think they were highlighting that this non participation in telelearning is not limited to disadvantaged families. I think that’s an interesting point of view, especially in this forum, where (I’ll stop here bc I don’t want to go negative.) This forum is a potential opportunity to pinpoint what’s working and what works less well. Obviously, extent of parental facilitation expected is a key element of any telelearning program.[/quote] dp: The kid matters too. I am available and supportive for my DS. A model student at school, he *hates* distance learning. Getting him to spend 10 minutes on Zoom call is major struggle. He just can’t stand the tedium when there is no structure (other than me) preventing him from leaving. He’ll be fine — he reads and builds non-stop. But he barely participates in DL.[/quote]
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