Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.
A new vaccine requirement would have to be passed into law by the Virginia legislature. School districts cannot do this on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Are they allowed? Yes
Will teachers be cross referencing and checking vaccination status to be mask police? No
As a teacher, I don’t have time for that and certainly won’t memorize the vaccination status for my 130+ high school students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming a kid is old enough to be vaccinated but isn't for whatever reason, will their teachers know this information and become mask police the whole year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
OP here. I understand the point about requiring proof of other vaccines. But a kid's MMR vaccination status isn't publicly known to their teachers and classmates, so no one would know that a kid's family has a religious or medical exemption for that vaccine. That's not true with this vaccination, at least if vaccinated kids are allowed to go maskless while the unvaccinated kids have to wear masks. It just feels like very private information that is made public by the distinction that schools might draw. I'm a little worried that unvaccinated kids will made to feel "other" if schools allow vaccinated kids to take off masks. I wonder, too, if teachers will treat kids differently if they are masked/unvaccinated, even on a subconscious level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
OP here. I understand the point about requiring proof of other vaccines. But a kid's MMR vaccination status isn't publicly known to their teachers and classmates, so no one would know that a kid's family has a religious or medical exemption for that vaccine. That's not true with this vaccination, at least if vaccinated kids are allowed to go maskless while the unvaccinated kids have to wear masks. It just feels like very private information that is made public by the distinction that schools might draw. I'm a little worried that unvaccinated kids will made to feel "other" if schools allow vaccinated kids to take off masks. I wonder, too, if teachers will treat kids differently if they are masked/unvaccinated, even on a subconscious level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
OP here. I understand the point about requiring proof of other vaccines. But a kid's MMR vaccination status isn't publicly known to their teachers and classmates, so no one would know that a kid's family has a religious or medical exemption for that vaccine. That's not true with this vaccination, at least if vaccinated kids are allowed to go maskless while the unvaccinated kids have to wear masks. It just feels like very private information that is made public by the distinction that schools might draw. I'm a little worried that unvaccinated kids will made to feel "other" if schools allow vaccinated kids to take off masks. I wonder, too, if teachers will treat kids differently if they are masked/unvaccinated, even on a subconscious level.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.