Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
I'm sure they weren't all virtual together. I'm sure some of those kids were forced into situations where virtual classes were not possible to join. Not everyone can just stay home with their kids on workdays.
If you cannot stay home with your kids you hire help, friend, family or figure it out. That's what parents do.
Ok. And I’m saying some of those child care arrangements aren’t going to be compatible with remote school. So yes, there’s a benefit to some of the quarantined kids, but harm to others.
Too bad. We are in a pandemic. Kids aren't convenient so if you choose to have them and they are school aged, if they are sent home, you need to figure out child care. That's life. You knew this when you choose to do in person/MCPS. There is harm to everyone in that school if COVID spreads so the point of the quarantine to reduce illness which takes priority over convenience. Some people shouldn't have kids.
X1000. There is a hard truth that most people refuse to accept. When you think about having kids, you need to actually think about it. Plan what it will look like. Don’t use school as you primary daycare bc we’ve all seen now that works. I know the popular argument is, “but they are here now! Can’t turn back time” you’re right, so deal with it. Do things that parents have to do. I’m not sure why this is so hard for people to understand or why there is so much pushback on doing your job as parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
I'm sure they weren't all virtual together. I'm sure some of those kids were forced into situations where virtual classes were not possible to join. Not everyone can just stay home with their kids on workdays.
If you cannot stay home with your kids you hire help, friend, family or figure it out. That's what parents do.
Ok. And I’m saying some of those child care arrangements aren’t going to be compatible with remote school. So yes, there’s a benefit to some of the quarantined kids, but harm to others.
Too bad. We are in a pandemic. Kids aren't convenient so if you choose to have them and they are school aged, if they are sent home, you need to figure out child care. That's life. You knew this when you choose to do in person/MCPS. There is harm to everyone in that school if COVID spreads so the point of the quarantine to reduce illness which takes priority over convenience. Some people shouldn't have kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
I'm sure they weren't all virtual together. I'm sure some of those kids were forced into situations where virtual classes were not possible to join. Not everyone can just stay home with their kids on workdays.
If you cannot stay home with your kids you hire help, friend, family or figure it out. That's what parents do.
Ok. And I’m saying some of those child care arrangements aren’t going to be compatible with remote school. So yes, there’s a benefit to some of the quarantined kids, but harm to others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
I'm sure they weren't all virtual together. I'm sure some of those kids were forced into situations where virtual classes were not possible to join. Not everyone can just stay home with their kids on workdays.
If you cannot stay home with your kids you hire help, friend, family or figure it out. That's what parents do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
I'm sure they weren't all virtual together. I'm sure some of those kids were forced into situations where virtual classes were not possible to join. Not everyone can just stay home with their kids on workdays.
Anonymous wrote:I see the upside of the whole-class quarantine, which we experienced this week, as being that they are all virtual together with their teacher, so no one is missing out on instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously? You want to complain about reasonable precautions?
At okra Singer they quarantined 8 classes for 3 positive cases. That’s not reasonable. That’s trying to keep as many kids home as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously? You want to complain about reasonable precautions?