Anonymous wrote:"Some critics see teachers’ unions as trying to have it both ways: reluctant to return to classrooms, but also resistant in some districts to providing a full day of remote school via tools like live video — the kind of interactive, online instruction that many parents say their children need after watching them flounder in the spring."
Anonymous wrote:I don’t read this thread as hostile. I am a teacher but am frustrated by what feels like a lack of cooperation from unions around school this fall. I want:
1. To be back in the classroom this fall with masks, clear guidance for students, smaller classes
Since this is looking unlikely, I would like DL to run close to a normal school day but with very clear grading policies and the ability to hold students accountable. It will be very difficult for me to work from home (which I hate) and put in maximum effort if students have no accountability. The spring was brutal because kids didn’t have to come to class or do work so I was planning for maybe 20% of my class to show up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article also said "A July poll found that 60 percent of parents supported delaying school reopenings until the virus is under control. Polls show that Black and Latino families, who have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic, have expressed more concern about returning to school than white parents have, but are also more worried about the academic and social impacts of online learning." It's not just teachers driving the delayed return to in-person schooling.
Hi - did you read my post? I don’t want to hear about what we shouldn’t do. Please restrict your posting to constructive suggestions. Thank you. I am mad too but there are lots of threads about what one is not happy with already.
Anonymous wrote:What teachers want is for everyone to stay home and wear a freaking mask if you HAVE to go out, and don’t let your teens or young adults go out, or to parties, or the beach, and then we can beat this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article also said "A July poll found that 60 percent of parents supported delaying school reopenings until the virus is under control. Polls show that Black and Latino families, who have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic, have expressed more concern about returning to school than white parents have, but are also more worried about the academic and social impacts of online learning." It's not just teachers driving the delayed return to in-person schooling.
Well in this area in NOVA, the majority of families said they would choose to go in person (from surveys in Arlington, Fairfax, and Falls Church). The schools couldn’t make it happen because of lack of staff.
Anonymous wrote:This article also said "A July poll found that 60 percent of parents supported delaying school reopenings until the virus is under control. Polls show that Black and Latino families, who have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic, have expressed more concern about returning to school than white parents have, but are also more worried about the academic and social impacts of online learning." It's not just teachers driving the delayed return to in-person schooling.
Anonymous wrote:This article also said "A July poll found that 60 percent of parents supported delaying school reopenings until the virus is under control. Polls show that Black and Latino families, who have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic, have expressed more concern about returning to school than white parents have, but are also more worried about the academic and social impacts of online learning." It's not just teachers driving the delayed return to in-person schooling.