Anonymous wrote:As a teacher who gets sick quite often (and I catch everything from my students) I find it highly offensive and incredibly rude that you’re judging teachers like myself for being out sick. You don’t know what people have going on in their personal lives- sick parents, children, appointments, etc so why don’t you come do our job for us bc clearly you seem to know better.
I’m not knocking you for being sick. That is part of life. But it seems like the school can’t find substitutes so one teacher ends up trying to manage and teach a combined group of kids for the day. It’s not fair for the teacher who has to take on 2 classes at the same time and the kids don’t actually learn that day. They typically get to play on a computer or just read a book. There is no surge capacity. I get this is a system wide problem (not the teacher) but you have to admit it sucks for learning.
With any business (or government agency) that requires in-person interaction with “customers” to be successful, you can understand why a school can’t be effective without teachers. The school has to have an effective plan for when their employees can’t go to work. I’m not knocking you.