Anonymous wrote:Again, anyone exposed by the partying over the weekend certainly will not Test positive by Sunday. Parents and kids should know better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at a local private. We are lucky to have a few long-term subs on campus everyday. However, we still don’t have enough subs to cover for everyone who’s been sick, experiencing mild symptoms but awaiting PCR test results (3-4 days in DC), or home with a sick or quarantined child. Our division heads and admin staffers are covering classes and duties. It’s meant that we don’t always have people available when a child needs to be sent to the office or school counselor. It’s meant canceling parent meetings or attending them for just a few minutes so that teaching staff can substitute for absent staff. That’s sustainable for a week or two, but if post-break absences are any higher than they were throughout December, sustaining operations will be difficult. We can’t magic up more personnel, no matter how many angry letters the HoS gets.
Parents will sub.
We’ve seen our tooth private schools kids - particularly lower school - fall quite behind in their foundational skills. And no review this year after 1.5 years of 2.5 hours of virtual school a day.
Great time to be a $100/30 min tutor!
Parents absolutely will not sub. Maybe one or two, sure, but my school couldn’t get subs consistently pre-COVID.
But even if they did- is sending your kid to sit in a classroom that’s being covered but not taught by an unqualified warm body really “in-person learning” or is it a balm to make YOU feel better?
Anonymous wrote:So with all the parties on the 31st and 1st, will the back to school testing on Sunday-Tuesday be too early to detect the spread of Covid? I want to keep the kid home for the first week anyway and would prefer virtual classes for the first week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at a local private. We are lucky to have a few long-term subs on campus everyday. However, we still don’t have enough subs to cover for everyone who’s been sick, experiencing mild symptoms but awaiting PCR test results (3-4 days in DC), or home with a sick or quarantined child. Our division heads and admin staffers are covering classes and duties. It’s meant that we don’t always have people available when a child needs to be sent to the office or school counselor. It’s meant canceling parent meetings or attending them for just a few minutes so that teaching staff can substitute for absent staff. That’s sustainable for a week or two, but if post-break absences are any higher than they were throughout December, sustaining operations will be difficult. We can’t magic up more personnel, no matter how many angry letters the HoS gets.
Parents will sub.
We’ve seen our tooth private schools kids - particularly lower school - fall quite behind in their foundational skills. And no review this year after 1.5 years of 2.5 hours of virtual school a day.
Great time to be a $100/30 min tutor!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue remains staffing. If you don't have enough healthy staff and you don't have enough subs it's very hard to run School
The Parents of DCUM have long since decided that any old warm body can be a teacher and that it’s not a special skill.
Quite how that reconciles with the notion that private schools are The Best Ever isn’t clear but never mind that.
Bs- just saying we can find a solution to a sub shortage.
I teach my kids a can do philosophy, a champions’ philosophy of possibilities and a preachers philosophy of favor and victory.
You sound like you read a trade unionist philosophy of negativity and exclusion. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue remains staffing. If you don't have enough healthy staff and you don't have enough subs it's very hard to run School
Not hard to get subs if you pay them. And plenty of parents would volunteer. This is a canard.
If you have a list of background checked and qualified subs, by all means, please share.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, try the Public Libraries in the Mayor’s pet wards of 4,5,7& 8
You can literally go to Fessenden and CT this very moment and get what you need for free. Last time I checked, that was in ward 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at a local private. We are lucky to have a few long-term subs on campus everyday. However, we still don’t have enough subs to cover for everyone who’s been sick, experiencing mild symptoms but awaiting PCR test results (3-4 days in DC), or home with a sick or quarantined child. Our division heads and admin staffers are covering classes and duties. It’s meant that we don’t always have people available when a child needs to be sent to the office or school counselor. It’s meant canceling parent meetings or attending them for just a few minutes so that teaching staff can substitute for absent staff. That’s sustainable for a week or two, but if post-break absences are any higher than they were throughout December, sustaining operations will be difficult. We can’t magic up more personnel, no matter how many angry letters the HoS gets.
The same staffing constraints are what is driving the 1000's of airline flight cancellations. There simply aren't enough Covid negative pilots left to fly planes or flight crew to staff the plane.
But the good news is that with infections that high, it peaks quickly and then dramatically drops off.
Give it 6 weeks from Mid- December and we will be coming out of this- at least on East Coast.
Anonymous wrote:I teach at a local private. We are lucky to have a few long-term subs on campus everyday. However, we still don’t have enough subs to cover for everyone who’s been sick, experiencing mild symptoms but awaiting PCR test results (3-4 days in DC), or home with a sick or quarantined child. Our division heads and admin staffers are covering classes and duties. It’s meant that we don’t always have people available when a child needs to be sent to the office or school counselor. It’s meant canceling parent meetings or attending them for just a few minutes so that teaching staff can substitute for absent staff. That’s sustainable for a week or two, but if post-break absences are any higher than they were throughout December, sustaining operations will be difficult. We can’t magic up more personnel, no matter how many angry letters the HoS gets.