Anonymous wrote:Negative for 5th grader.
7th grader wanted to wait until tomorrow.
10th grader did not receive a kit at school today.
I did find it a bit confusing that the instructions did not match the materials provided. And the squeeze the q-tip bit was awkward. Not my favorite rapid antigen test. And it's so sad that I now have a favorite rapid antigen test!
I wish they would make this mandatory by Wednesday, rather than "please do this by Friday." I hope they will at least follow up with families that don't submit results.
Anonymous wrote:With 2 kids who just recovered from covid, this just feels so wasteful. There are so many people who need tests and cannot get them. I hate that I have to use these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite having 1 kid test positive on Friday by pcr, the other 3 tested negative with the mcps tests tonight. I’m dubious. How aren’t my other kids sick?
The other kids were asymptomatic and already had it....or they will test positive in a day or two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Got a dud box (one full test and one partial). This seems like potential for an even bigger mess.
Us too. The box had all the parts but the solution vial was empty.
Look again. The liquid is there to fill it with.
Anonymous wrote:Despite having 1 kid test positive on Friday by pcr, the other 3 tested negative with the mcps tests tonight. I’m dubious. How aren’t my other kids sick?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is class work and homework handled for HS students that now have to quarantine? This is a real concern for me reporting a positive.
Keeping my elementary aged kid home for 10 days with no school (sorry random virtual academy is not school) is also a concern for reporting positive (my kid isn't positive FYI). I just don't understand how MCPS thinks it's appropriate to keep a child out of school for two weeks without the option to test negative to return after 5 days. This is insanity. It's a disincentive to report positive cases.
Agreed. There just needs to be mandatory pooled testing on a weekly basis. No opt out.
No you have it absolutely wrong. If they want to force kids to stay home, they need to excuse all work. The days of forcing parents to homeschool needs to end. We have jobs and in my case a HS student that I cannot assist with their level of work. [/quote
Why can't they treat like any other excused sick absence? Children work asynchronously, turn in work on a modified schedule, etc. When you have the flu, you don't get to just get all work waiived.
Because it is the last two weeks of the semester and these grades are needed for college transcripts. This isn’t 3 grade level school work, it requires instruction from a teacher and can’t be done asynchronous. The whole asynchronous is a f()king disaster for high school students.
Anonymous wrote:Negative for 5th grader.
7th grader wanted to wait until tomorrow.
10th grader did not receive a kit at school today.
I did find it a bit confusing that the instructions did not match the materials provided. And the squeeze the q-tip bit was awkward. Not my favorite rapid antigen test. And it's so sad that I now have a favorite rapid antigen test!
I wish they would make this mandatory by Wednesday, rather than "please do this by Friday." I hope they will at least follow up with families that don't submit results.
Anonymous wrote:Our second grader tested negative. Our kindergartener fell asleep before we could test him so we will test him tomorrow morning. The instructions in the kit did not match the items in the kit. The instructions indicated it was premixed but it wasn’t and we had to add the solution ourselves.