Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you and I would simply view risks quite differently. My kids have been going to daycare throughout the pandemic. My spouse is immunosuppressed, and has been going to work in-person as a healthcare provider throughout the pandemic. A couple grandparents are also on immunosuppressants, which did mean in-person visits were limited during case surges before the vaccines were available.
We weren't particularly happy with a lot of these decisions, but we also didn't think we had much of a choice. We needed to go to work. Our kids needed daycare and therapy services. So, we always approached decisions based on what was needed- both individually and collectively, and worked back from there without agonizing over the associated risks that we couldn't control.
Thanks for this perspective. I guess what I'm struggling with is how "needed" it is to send a 3.5 year old to preschool. We have childcare at home, so sending her to school is just for her development. I think she will benefit from school, espcially with her personality, but maybe it's not really important to attend school at her age.
PP here. I don't think it's a matter of age as much as development. If she's developed appropriate social skills for her age, then she's probably doing fine. Mine weren't, so we moved them into separate, larger preschool programs geared towards their particular needs.
In general I think there's tremendous value in exposing young kids to structured preschool settings, for both educational and socialization reasons. And I suspect that's not terribly controversial to say. But each person is going to view personal risks very differently, which will obviously strongly influence the cost-benefit analysis.
I will say you seem to have realistic expectations regarding masking and mitigations at that age. I haven't seen good mask compliance among the 3 year olds in my son's class. The teachers still try, but it's pretty clearly just for show. You might want to double check classroom seperation policies. They do that at one of my son's preschool too, but only during the main part of the day. Before 8:30am and after 4:30pm the kids end up in the same room.