Anonymous wrote:So who is selecting kids for in-person taught class? Is it DCPS or the school
Administration itself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email from our school:
DCPS HR is currently determining staff availability for in-person learning at each elementary school site and I am required to follow a specific process when assigning staff to in-person or virtual learning.
I did find it interesting that the Principal stated that in-person learning teacher will be a grade level homeroom or a grade level co-teacher with other staff available to support.
I thought Special Education Teachers were specifically designated federal funds and had to provide services per IEPs. I a class has a mix of students that did not all have IEPs, wouldn't this be a violation to have a special education teacher teach this classroom?
Not really. Is this Janney?
Anonymous wrote:Email from our school:
DCPS HR is currently determining staff availability for in-person learning at each elementary school site and I am required to follow a specific process when assigning staff to in-person or virtual learning.
I did find it interesting that the Principal stated that in-person learning teacher will be a grade level homeroom or a grade level co-teacher with other staff available to support.
I thought Special Education Teachers were specifically designated federal funds and had to provide services per IEPs. I a class has a mix of students that did not all have IEPs, wouldn't this be a violation to have a special education teacher teach this classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. How can principals release a plan before teachers from their school are brought into the conversation? How do they know how many teachers can or are willing to come back without a survey? Do the teacher receive marching orders from the principal or DCPS?
Feeling clueless.
My understanding is DCPS is telling principals which teachers are required to come back based on the survey results.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. How can principals release a plan before teachers from their school are brought into the conversation? How do they know how many teachers can or are willing to come back without a survey? Do the teacher receive marching orders from the principal or DCPS?
Feeling clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. How can principals release a plan before teachers from their school are brought into the conversation? How do they know how many teachers can or are willing to come back without a survey? Do the teacher receive marching orders from the principal or DCPS?
Feeling clueless.
Anonymous wrote:I know our principal is working a ton behind the scenes to find a workable implementation. It’s an impossible task and almost no one will be happy. I’m sure our principal isn’t the only one quietly trying to get some concessions from central office before finalizing plans. Hoping DCPS relents a bit on the rigidity so that it can be marginally less of a disaster.