Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds pretty strange. I wonder if that policy is due to a miscommunication. I could easily imagine someone turning "there's no policy on masks outside" into "the policy is no masks outside."
I guess they might be concerned about heat and breathing. I know I have a hard time breathing if I'm chasing my kids around in a mask (I do have asthma, but I don't think that's contributing much). And being outside in the heat in a mask is absolute misery.
Still, it doesn't seem like something that should be forbidden.
Yeah OP I would clarify what they mean. At our center the kids usually take them off for outside and I'm fine with that (by choosing to go back to daycare we are accepting a certain level of risk to begin with), but they can leave them on too. However, if your kid is going to wear a mask outside, you probably would need to bring a fresh one for after that time because it will probably be sweaty and gross.
But if you clarify and still don't like the policy, you're free to find a new daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Calm down, OP. My kid has been at preschool this entire time. They've had one case at her center and the teacher (who was part-time) didn't spread it to anyone else.
Teachers are in masks, but they only started having the kids wear them (2 and up) this past week. They don't have to wear their masks outside.
Anonymous wrote:That sounds pretty strange. I wonder if that policy is due to a miscommunication. I could easily imagine someone turning "there's no policy on masks outside" into "the policy is no masks outside."
I guess they might be concerned about heat and breathing. I know I have a hard time breathing if I'm chasing my kids around in a mask (I do have asthma, but I don't think that's contributing much). And being outside in the heat in a mask is absolute misery.
Still, it doesn't seem like something that should be forbidden.
Anonymous wrote:Calm down, OP. My kid has been at preschool this entire time. They've had one case at her center and the teacher (who was part-time) didn't spread it to anyone else.
Teachers are in masks, but they only started having the kids wear them (2 and up) this past week. They don't have to wear their masks outside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No masks outdoors, where there's really no evidence of spread. This isn't the hill I'd die on personally.
Although I would probably ask if it is really making their lives easier to do that - assuming they wear masks indoors, isn't having a separate set of rules for outside just adding unnecessary complexity?
Even when they aren't social distancing AT ALL?
Yes, their policy is that kids are encouraged to wear them indoors and all teachers must.
It may be sensible to expect teachers to wear them outside. Kids, not so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No masks outdoors, where there's really no evidence of spread. This isn't the hill I'd die on personally.
Although I would probably ask if it is really making their lives easier to do that - assuming they wear masks indoors, isn't having a separate set of rules for outside just adding unnecessary complexity?
Even when they aren't social distancing AT ALL?
Yes, their policy is that kids are encouraged to wear them indoors and all teachers must.
Anonymous wrote:No masks outdoors, where there's really no evidence of spread. This isn't the hill I'd die on personally.
Although I would probably ask if it is really making their lives easier to do that - assuming they wear masks indoors, isn't having a separate set of rules for outside just adding unnecessary complexity?
Anonymous wrote:You mean they don't wear masks while playing outside?
That's not a big deal to me as long as they're practicing social distancing. The risk of outdoor transmission is very very low.