Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the thoughtful responses. Yes, exposure was outside of school. The class has another similarly situated kid, so its two kids. And I am keeping my kid home to protect others, just in case. (Its terrible.)
If they tried simulcasting and it was a hot mess, I'd understand. But they don't seem to have any plan at all (how 'bout a lunch bunch math lesson?) and they both KNOW kids are going to be out and WANT kids to stay home of there is any risk at all. Morning meeting seemed to go okay today - the visual wasn't great but we could hear the teacher and my kid was called on to share - unmute-share-re-mute.
I wish they were trying harder or had a plan - what great PR it would be if I was telling everyone that I was glad I kept Kid home, just in case, and the school did a good job keeping us on track.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the thoughtful responses. Yes, exposure was outside of school. The class has another similarly situated kid, so its two kids. And I am keeping my kid home to protect others, just in case. (Its terrible.)
If they tried simulcasting and it was a hot mess, I'd understand. But they don't seem to have any plan at all (how 'bout a lunch bunch math lesson?) and they both KNOW kids are going to be out and WANT kids to stay home of there is any risk at all. Morning meeting seemed to go okay today - the visual wasn't great but we could hear the teacher and my kid was called on to share - unmute-share-re-mute.
I wish they were trying harder or had a plan - what great PR it would be if I was telling everyone that I was glad I kept Kid home, just in case, and the school did a good job keeping us on track.
Anonymous wrote:Counterpoint: If OP's kid's exposure was outside of school, and she is keeping him home from school, she is voluntarily doing this to protect others in the classroom from possibly getting the covid that her kid was exposed to. Particularly if he is not showing symptoms, OP has zero personal incentive to keep him home from school. Her motivations are primarily altruistic-- to protect others. I think a school would want to encourage this behavior by providing students who self-report and self-quarantine with the work so that these kids do not fall behind.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I agree that it's not the school's burden to simulcast for a kid who was exposed outside of school, but I also agree that these are not normal times, and we should expect a significant portion of the student body to be home at some point this year if everyone follows protocols. So it would be nice if there was a plan. When I was a kid, and had to stay home sick with mono, my teachers made a work plan from home for me. Maybe that is more what to expect. OP--are you trying to reach out to the teachers or the admin? Have they offered any at home learning options?
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your son's exposure was not at school? If not, I don't think requesting simulcast as a one-off for your son alone is a reasonable request. The small groups are more reasonable because they don't have a negative effect on the whole class, but -- again -- if this is an outside exposure, your son is basically just in the same position as any sick kid any other year from the school's perspective. Why would they be expected to provide any special accommodations they don't generally? Now this isn't to say that the city shouldn't be doing something, they absolutely should... likely through the central DCPS virtual school; but your individual school?
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your son's exposure was not at school? If not, I don't think requesting simulcast as a one-off for your son alone is a reasonable request. The small groups are more reasonable because they don't have a negative effect on the whole class, but -- again -- if this is an outside exposure, your son is basically just in the same position as any sick kid any other year from the school's perspective. Why would they be expected to provide any special accommodations they don't generally? Now this isn't to say that the city shouldn't be doing something, they absolutely should... likely through the central DCPS virtual school; but your individual school?