Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fine whatever. But separate and not tied to home school is key. The DL crowd shouldn’t interfere with real school in my neighborhood school.
Right because your needs trump everyone else’s. Which is why many of us are not in a hurry to go back with Covid. It is real learning. Not much more happens in person.
Anonymous wrote:Fine whatever. But separate and not tied to home school is key. The DL crowd shouldn’t interfere with real school in my neighborhood school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some kids are thriving in it, so why oppose having options and reduce overcrowding.
The reality of staffing logistics.
Anonymous wrote:Some kids are thriving in it, so why oppose having options and reduce overcrowding.
Anonymous wrote:My prediction is that next year will be a transitional year for DL. Right now 60% of families chose it and even assuming that that number goes down to 20% or something it's means creating a program for 30,000 students and staff, it's too big. My guess is that distance learning will still be managed at the school level for the next year.
My optimistic take on the situation is:
- vaccine stay ahead of community spread and our metrics stay low
- mcps goes down to 3 ft social distancing.
- most families choose in person and maybe 10- 20% choose DL so you can designate one or two virtual only classes per grade in ES. (Gets trickier in secondary, there might be more concurrent teaching but virtual only for core subjects?)
- with 3 feet of distancing you could probably get almost everybody back in the building full-time, schools with bigger classes per grade might need trailers.
- DL might still be an option for snow days or if a class has an outbreak
By fall of 2022 the number of people choosing distance learning would only be the really hardcore DL fanboys and the numbers would be realistically that you could create a DL academy and enroll a smaller fraction of students.
- by fall if 2022
Anonymous wrote:I thought I read somewhere that it would be limited to 1% of students. Basically more extreme situations. There have been a limited number of students doing learning at home prior to the pandemic because of medical reasons. At my daughter’s school a student could control a robot with a screen on it. They were just starting to roll out this technology more before the pandemic hit. But the emphasis was still to collaborate with students and teachers in school.
Anonymous wrote:They haven't released any info. It's part of the planning for next year. I think this means that if you want to stay virtual, you will be in a separate county-wide program next year, rather than one associated with your local school.