Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Because any "data" they collect is fairly useless.
Someone who doesn't fill it out if kid isn't in school.
It’s useless because of people like you. Congratulations.
Thank you! I appreciate the congratulations.
It's pandemic theater. You do realize people are just clicking no. If your kid was really feeling sick would you really send them to school? If so there are bigger issues than a useless checklist. It's more a CYA checklist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Because any "data" they collect is fairly useless.
Someone who doesn't fill it out if kid isn't in school.
It’s useless because of people like you. Congratulations.
Thank you! I appreciate the congratulations.
It's pandemic theater. You do realize people are just clicking no. If your kid was really feeling sick would you really send them to school? If so there are bigger issues than a useless checklist. It's more a CYA checklist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Because any "data" they collect is fairly useless.
Someone who doesn't fill it out if kid isn't in school.
It’s useless because of people like you. Congratulations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Because any "data" they collect is fairly useless.
Someone who doesn't fill it out if kid isn't in school.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the instructions are very specific that you should be answering every day. Think about it, if someone who goes to school Thursday/Friday gets a positive test on Saturday but doesn’t report it until the following Thursday, that’s a lot of lost days that could be spent contact tracing and trying to head off further spread. If too many people don’t answer every day, APS also loses a a lot of potentially valuable data to assess whether covid appears to be spreading in school communities because the data it does get is too limited to be useful.
It’s not that hard to click through the survey each day, and I really don’t get people who screamed about how we needed to do more to get covid under control but then aren’t willing to make the slightest effort to help APS do its part.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Does anyone know how many cases of COVID there have been already in APS since school came back in?