Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On the logistical side, they'd have to swap out the toilets for smaller ones (and for the younger kids there wouldn't be bathrooms in the classrooms)
Do you guys all have dual toilets at home? Have you heard of stools? I mean honestly, have we lost our minds? (I know this is a losing battle but I would just like to see some acknowledgement that we’ve just completely folded without even trying.
If your child falls off the stool into the toilet in your home it’s not a huge deal. It it happens in school you’re going to need to fill out forms and deal with lawsuit threats from the parents. And then they don’t allow stools in the bathroom anymore and you spend bathroom break lifting children on and off the toilet, and you need another adult to be in the bathroom with you to make sure there’s no funny business.
Before you blame schools and teachers for not trying you need to understand the reason why where you see solutions we see problems. Litigious parents are why bees, sun, poor air quality, and heat are reasons why we can’t have class outside. Why stools in the bathroom are a no go. For every good out of the box solution there is a crazy person out there that will find a problem with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On the logistical side, they'd have to swap out the toilets for smaller ones (and for the younger kids there wouldn't be bathrooms in the classrooms)
Do you guys all have dual toilets at home? Have you heard of stools? I mean honestly, have we lost our minds? (I know this is a losing battle but I would just like to see some acknowledgement that we’ve just completely folded without even trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hiring more teachers is likely a bigger hurdle than you imagine. Where will these teachers come from?
Also, are there enough buildings with classrooms that have adequate ventilation? And what about meals, when kids have to remove their masks? Will the schools have to buy new classroom furniture, because chairs and tables sized for teenagers are too big for first graders?
I’m the disappointed poster above. I agree hiring is a major challenge but seriously do you think it’s acceptable that our schools are run by people who can’t figure out the other questions. I mean seriously.
Anonymous wrote:On the logistical side, they'd have to swap out the toilets for smaller ones (and for the younger kids there wouldn't be bathrooms in the classrooms)
Anonymous wrote:Hiring more teachers is likely a bigger hurdle than you imagine. Where will these teachers come from?
Also, are there enough buildings with classrooms that have adequate ventilation? And what about meals, when kids have to remove their masks? Will the schools have to buy new classroom furniture, because chairs and tables sized for teenagers are too big for first graders?
Anonymous wrote:DCPS is going to be stretched too thin to organize something like this. It simply is not realistic. what you describe is complex and misses staffing. Custodians assigned to Wilson don't want to work to clean up after 4 year olds nor does that custodial staff want another school's custodial staff to come into their school. What you describe will not happen.