Anonymous wrote:Just like we need to educate people that the vaccine is safe and effective, we need to educate parents that it is safe for their children to be in school.
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids was doing in person K (at a private school). Her teacher tested positive for covid. Then kids had to stay home for two weeks. It has been pandemonium. Parents are quarantining. Some tested positive at least 5 classmates positive not sure if it's from the teacher. Everyone is upset. If I could go back and do it again, I would not do this. The stress and disruption are far worse than having kept her home.
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids was doing in person K (at a private school). Her teacher tested positive for covid. Then kids had to stay home for two weeks. It has been pandemonium. Parents are quarantining. Some tested positive at least 5 classmates positive not sure if it's from the teacher. Everyone is upset. If I could go back and do it again, I would not do this. The stress and disruption are far worse than having kept her home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Using 2 large urban districts as an example doesn’t really describe the feelings of all parents universally.
+1
I think if you surveyed the landscape of the entire country, most parents want kids back in school and many already have them in school.
Anonymous wrote:Using 2 large urban districts as an example doesn’t really describe the feelings of all parents universally.
There is this emerging narrative that all-powerful teachers' unions have forced ongoing school closures. But I think the key political fact on the ground is serious ambivalence among *parents* about whether in-person school is desirable right now.