Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because we have mitigation
and because this model does not correspond to actual evidence from UK, where school rates fell during Delta.
https://fortune.com/2021/08/12/as-delta-infections-spiked-covid-cases-in-schools-actually-fell-a-lesson-from-england/
We don’t have real mitigation. Cloth and surgical masks are useless Kleenex against the transmissibility of Delta and “distancing when possible” is a copout and a joke.
P.S, We’re not the UK, no matter how many times you reference them, and other countries ahead of us on the Delta curve have not had the same results the UK did. Oh, and the UK’s cases are climbing again, after a brief dip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:delta is only 50% more transmissible than the variant circulating last year when vaccination rates were low and our school was back at around 2/3 the total student body, with normal class sizes. There were 2 cases and zero spread in school afaik. I don’t think this model is correct.
I don’t think you understand 50% more means.
What schools had normal class sizes during the 2020-3021 school year?
Anonymous wrote:because we have mitigation
and because this model does not correspond to actual evidence from UK, where school rates fell during Delta.
https://fortune.com/2021/08/12/as-delta-infections-spiked-covid-cases-in-schools-actually-fell-a-lesson-from-england/
Anonymous wrote:I support vaccination mandates. I would be thrilled if that happened. But I don't think we're getting those for kids this year. And given the low numbers for 12-18 year olds, we should expect that just approval for younger kids isn't going to have much of an impact. So 'virtual until all children get vaccinated' is the same as 'no school for the indefinite future, and probably not all year.' The idea that we should just wait a bit longer or catastrophe will happen is what we've been told for the last year and a half, and the track record has been so-so, with the reality usually being that the connection between policy and outcomes is harder to predict.
If dcps said 'vaccination mandates for older kids' now, and they could actually make that happen, I'd trust them a lot more if they also said 'and we need to delay fully opening for younger kids, because we'll mandate for them as soon as it's available' I'd think they were wrong, but I'd at least think they were credible. But just waiting, with no real plan -- you might as well just say "let's all miss 2.5 years of school."
Anonymous wrote:delta is only 50% more transmissible than the variant circulating last year when vaccination rates were low and our school was back at around 2/3 the total student body, with normal class sizes. There were 2 cases and zero spread in school afaik. I don’t think this model is correct.
Anonymous wrote:delta is only 50% more transmissible than the variant circulating last year when vaccination rates were low and our school was back at around 2/3 the total student body, with normal class sizes. There were 2 cases and zero spread in school afaik. I don’t think this model is correct.
Anonymous wrote:Because most parents think they and their kids are invincible and it will not happen to them.