Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, clearly, the teachers want the kids to wear masks. Maybe they have health conditions. Maybe they have family members with health conditions. If you guys are jerks to them about it, there’s a chance they might quit and get another job. So I would just go with the flow.
Personally, I think the guidance should be that if the teacher in the classroom wants kids to wear masks, they should wear masks unless they have a specific exception for like a developmental disability or something.
Given how little we know about the impact of masks on young children's development, I think such a policy would be horribly irresponsible as it amounts to indefinite masking of many young children during a time when the CDC does not recommend masks for anybody. It is amazing and honestly terrifying to me to see how differently my 3 yo interacts with other kids when neither is masked. This is a huge experiment we are putting our young kids in. If we do it it should at least be based on public health guidance, not individual people's feelings.
We know the impact COVID can have on someone, especially health issues. You don't care about those kids? What if it was your kid and you had to pay their medical bills?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, clearly, the teachers want the kids to wear masks. Maybe they have health conditions. Maybe they have family members with health conditions. If you guys are jerks to them about it, there’s a chance they might quit and get another job. So I would just go with the flow.
Personally, I think the guidance should be that if the teacher in the classroom wants kids to wear masks, they should wear masks unless they have a specific exception for like a developmental disability or something.
Given how little we know about the impact of masks on young children's development, I think such a policy would be horribly irresponsible as it amounts to indefinite masking of many young children during a time when the CDC does not recommend masks for anybody. It is amazing and honestly terrifying to me to see how differently my 3 yo interacts with other kids when neither is masked. This is a huge experiment we are putting our young kids in. If we do it it should at least be based on public health guidance, not individual people's feelings.
We know the impact COVID can have on someone, especially health issues. You don't care about those kids? What if it was your kid and you had to pay their medical bills?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, clearly, the teachers want the kids to wear masks. Maybe they have health conditions. Maybe they have family members with health conditions. If you guys are jerks to them about it, there’s a chance they might quit and get another job. So I would just go with the flow.
Personally, I think the guidance should be that if the teacher in the classroom wants kids to wear masks, they should wear masks unless they have a specific exception for like a developmental disability or something.
Given how little we know about the impact of masks on young children's development, I think such a policy would be horribly irresponsible as it amounts to indefinite masking of many young children during a time when the CDC does not recommend masks for anybody. It is amazing and honestly terrifying to me to see how differently my 3 yo interacts with other kids when neither is masked. This is a huge experiment we are putting our young kids in. If we do it it should at least be based on public health guidance, not individual people's feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Look, clearly, the teachers want the kids to wear masks. Maybe they have health conditions. Maybe they have family members with health conditions. If you guys are jerks to them about it, there’s a chance they might quit and get another job. So I would just go with the flow.
Personally, I think the guidance should be that if the teacher in the classroom wants kids to wear masks, they should wear masks unless they have a specific exception for like a developmental disability or something.
Anonymous wrote:Look, clearly, the teachers want the kids to wear masks. Maybe they have health conditions. Maybe they have family members with health conditions. If you guys are jerks to them about it, there’s a chance they might quit and get another job. So I would just go with the flow.
Personally, I think the guidance should be that if the teacher in the classroom wants kids to wear masks, they should wear masks unless they have a specific exception for like a developmental disability or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids probably saw their classmate getting a new mask from. their teacher and then the floodgates opened and everyone wanted one.
Yep, this is what I guess too.
Kinda like when you give one kid a tissue and then the whole class claims to have boogies.
Anonymous wrote:The kids probably saw their classmate getting a new mask from. their teacher and then the floodgates opened and everyone wanted one.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly never thought our daycare in DC would drop masks, but they recently did. My child is in the “older toddler” class so most kids are 2 years- 2.5 years and have been masking since they got in that room. Out of a class of 14, about 10 families have chosen to not mask. At pickup last week all the children were back in disposable, child sized medical masks. Turns out after the children were dropped off teachers offered masks to all the kids. These aren’t incredibly verbal kids as they are young twos so they all took one. When asked, the teachers said all the children wanted to wear them.
Would you say something or just go with the flow and assume this made the teachers feel more comfortable?