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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Be careful: The same people who are weaponizing school opening are also blocking safe opening"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]So basically all three graphs that have now been shared are basically reporting the same thing.[/quote] But if anytime we don’t like what the data says, we can just continue to make demands for further data and data visualization that may or may not exist which we hope will tell the story we want to see. I’m pretty sure that’s how one wins an argument. [/quote] Given that all other countries and [b]huge swathes of this country[/b] have 5 day a week school uneventfully, it’s not really a fact based argument. But carry on. If we are dealing in actual facts, the most dangerous thing your child does is likely drive on a highway with you.[/quote] Are we measuring by sq. mileage now? [/quote] ^ and not that it should matter but I'm happy my kids are going back in a few weeks. I just want to be clear that we don't have an accurate % breakdown of the number of kids in DL/hybrid/IP. Or at least not that I've seem so far. Please share if you've seen otherwise. [/quote] Part of the real problem is there is no standardized data reporting. So there are organizations that try to consolidate data like posted links, but no federal standard like we have with CDC covid reporting . So any data analyst has to set basic parameters and measures by them. It’s also changing week by week in Many districts. This is the closest and their different visualizations are being used more frequently. https://cai.burbio.com/school-opening-tracker/[/quote] Yes, that has been posted several times, but still doesn’t give us % students breakdown - it’s looking at some school districts, not all students. Hoping for something more comprehensive, but maybe that doesn’t exist because we don’t have centralized/standardized reporting. [/quote] is something like this more like what you're trying to find? This is kind of a harsh split but the first map is states with R governors and the second map states with D governors. Total student cost is pretty close to equal, 24M vs 27M. R Governors: [img] https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EukFGkqWQAE6-Kf?format=jpg&name=4096x4096[/img] D Governors: [img] https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EukEQfsXYAAP5eZ?format=jpg&name=4096x4096[/img] [/quote] Seems like he used the same Burbio data "data reflects school mode by district, and weighted by student enrollment.": https://twitter.com/ifihadastick/status/1362627186595926019 [/quote] OK - even though this data is sus, I consolidated these numbers for sh1ts and giggles since we don't have anything better at the moment. [img]https://i.ibb.co/wgkqjb3/school.png[/img] 1/3rd of estimated US students are virtual 2/3rd are hybrid or fully in-person I'm actually shocked that the hybrid % isn't higher since everyone I know (from east coast to west coast) with kids back in school are hybrid. Out of those families, the most # of days in school is 4 in-person with one asynchronous day. [/quote]
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