Anonymous wrote:Way back in March 2020, before social distancing and before they shut down the schools at all, a teacher at my kid's school got it and a kid in the class also got it. No way to know if one passed it to the other, but it would be quite a coincidence if they got it independently given what the numbers were like back then.
Not sure how relevant this data is, though, given that there were no precautions being taken at that point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not aware of any evidence of spread *in* schools. I think prior to the Xmas break there actually hadn't been any instances of two people in the same classroom who had come into contact both getting COVID at all. I know there were a few places where multiple teachers in a school (but not the same classroom) got COVID within a 14 day period and I have no idea if any of those incidents have ever been traced to/heavily suggested school-based exposure.
Ok but so? My school 2 people got it but it was outside of school. I can't trust the adults at my school with my life. Nor do I know who lives in a high Covid zone as people live outside of DC.
It's never been about the school for me but I work with other adults in my classroom...are THEY following safety protocols outside of school....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its a virus. People will catch it. Big deal.
As someone recovering from Covid, it is a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS does have protocols for someone testing positive.
https://dcpsreopenstrong.com/health/response/
Anonymous wrote:I am not aware of any evidence of spread *in* schools. I think prior to the Xmas break there actually hadn't been any instances of two people in the same classroom who had come into contact both getting COVID at all. I know there were a few places where multiple teachers in a school (but not the same classroom) got COVID within a 14 day period and I have no idea if any of those incidents have ever been traced to/heavily suggested school-based exposure.
Anonymous wrote:Its a virus. People will catch it. Big deal.
Anonymous wrote:There's not really much of a way to know. We aren't testing enough inside or outside of schools. So if a couple of kids in a school get covid, did they get it from each other? Each get it from someone else in the school? Get it because they spend time together outside of school? Get it from totally independent sources? There is literally no way to accurately determine this.