Anonymous wrote:Are you expecting teachers to make a house call to each student or have a 6 hour zoom conference? It’s not going to be the same. This is just the beginning. Once things get rolling, I’m sure the work will pick up. Chill out!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents who are complaining are just looking for a free baby sitter for their kids.
Oh please. Cut the crap. No one, let alone the millions of working parents who are essentially doing three jobs right now - parent, worker, and teacher - are hardly looking for babysitting.
Again, just looking for reasonable explanations for the very limited instruction kids are going to get in the coming months.
45 minutes is a very condensed amount of time. And if you’re telling me that I as a parent should be able to step in and do as good a job as a teacher, okay. Just know that completely undermines the argument (which I’ve always believed) that teachers have a specialized skill and education and should be paid accordingly.
Trump failed, sure. But right now thinking MCPS has failed, too.
Anonymous wrote:Parents who are complaining are just looking for a free baby sitter for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ES teachers are teaching one class. I’m not suggesting teachers are not working; I’m asking as a parent and a taxpayer what the day looks like for an Elementary School teacher outside of the 45 minutes they’re on Zoom.
And yes, candidly, I’m disappointed that this is the best that MCPS can do at this point. Trying to understand.
I work a full time job that was previously almost entirely in-person job to a 100% remote one and get the challenges. But it’s also not that much different than when I had meetings in person. I prepare material and an agenda and I conduct the conversation by video conference. How is it so different for teachers?
PP, it's understandable that you're angry in these unprecedented times, but I will suggest that the most appropriate target for your anger is the failed response - in fact, the continuing, on-going failed response - of the people who are supposed to be in charge of the federal government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ES teachers are teaching one class. I’m not suggesting teachers are not working; I’m asking as a parent and a taxpayer what the day looks like for an Elementary School teacher outside of the 45 minutes they’re on Zoom.
And yes, candidly, I’m disappointed that this is the best that MCPS can do at this point. Trying to understand.
I work a full time job that was previously almost entirely in-person job to a 100% remote one and get the challenges. But it’s also not that much different than when I had meetings in person. I prepare material and an agenda and I conduct the conversation by video conference. How is it so different for teachers?
PP, it's understandable that you're angry in these unprecedented times, but I will suggest that the most appropriate target for your anger is the failed response - in fact, the continuing, on-going failed response - of the people who are supposed to be in charge of the federal government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have more meetings than ever before (ZOOM) and lesson preps, work plans emailed home, lots of parent correspondence, ZOOM class meetings.!!
---Teacher and mom
So is this what fills the other 7 hours of the day beyond the 45 minute class? Also I’m not getting work plans emailed from my teacher. It’s zoom class and a few links to other video-based learning.
Different teacher and mom here. Like most secondary teachers, I have more than one prep. So I’m conducting more than one 45 minute class, planning more than one 45 min class, and assessing more than one subject. One of my preps is a course for which there are not supplemental materials readily available via a Google search. To put together a 45 min lesson normal, I invested about 90 min of planning previously. Now, that has doubled as well because I don’t have access to the places I used to get materials from.
The other teacher wasn’t joking about the paperwork. That has not abated at all. On 3/12, I filled out screening paperwork for a child. The child’s doctor misplaced it and only let me know yesterday. That paperwork took me an hour when it was fresh in my head. No telling how long it will take now.
And there’s trainings, team meetings, and emails revising what were told my admin an hour before.
I’m not complaining. We are all in this together. But please stop your claims that teachers are not working. For the most part, we are working as hard as before, just differently. And spending even more money out of our own pockets to fill the gap between what MCPS provides and what is, in fact, needed to do our jobs. We are limited by rules that MCPS is putting in place. These rules do seem to be for the welfare of the students, but if you dislike them, don’t blame the teachers and don’t blame the union. Someone on DCUM is spreading the rumor that MCEA got a 2 hour break for teachers. That’s completely false. The break is for students to travel to pick up lunches and then eat. I have a daily Zoom meeting in that time frame.
ES teachers are teaching one class. I’m not suggesting teachers are not working; I’m asking as a parent and a taxpayer what the day looks like for an Elementary School teacher outside of the 45 minutes they’re on Zoom.
And yes, candidly, I’m disappointed that this is the best that MCPS can do at this point. Trying to understand.
I work a full time job that was previously almost entirely in-person job to a 100% remote one and get the challenges. But it’s also not that much different than when I had meetings in person. I prepare material and an agenda and I conduct the conversation by video conference. How is it so different for teachers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have more meetings than ever before (ZOOM) and lesson preps, work plans emailed home, lots of parent correspondence, ZOOM class meetings.!!
---Teacher and mom
So is this what fills the other 7 hours of the day beyond the 45 minute class? Also I’m not getting work plans emailed from my teacher. It’s zoom class and a few links to other video-based learning.
Different teacher and mom here. Like most secondary teachers, I have more than one prep. So I’m conducting more than one 45 minute class, planning more than one 45 min class, and assessing more than one subject. One of my preps is a course for which there are not supplemental materials readily available via a Google search. To put together a 45 min lesson normal, I invested about 90 min of planning previously. Now, that has doubled as well because I don’t have access to the places I used to get materials from.
The other teacher wasn’t joking about the paperwork. That has not abated at all. On 3/12, I filled out screening paperwork for a child. The child’s doctor misplaced it and only let me know yesterday. That paperwork took me an hour when it was fresh in my head. No telling how long it will take now.
And there’s trainings, team meetings, and emails revising what were told my admin an hour before.
I’m not complaining. We are all in this together. But please stop your claims that teachers are not working. For the most part, we are working as hard as before, just differently. And spending even more money out of our own pockets to fill the gap between what MCPS provides and what is, in fact, needed to do our jobs. We are limited by rules that MCPS is putting in place. These rules do seem to be for the welfare of the students, but if you dislike them, don’t blame the teachers and don’t blame the union. Someone on DCUM is spreading the rumor that MCEA got a 2 hour break for teachers. That’s completely false. The break is for students to travel to pick up lunches and then eat. I have a daily Zoom meeting in that time frame.
Anonymous wrote:
ES teachers are teaching one class. I’m not suggesting teachers are not working; I’m asking as a parent and a taxpayer what the day looks like for an Elementary School teacher outside of the 45 minutes they’re on Zoom.
And yes, candidly, I’m disappointed that this is the best that MCPS can do at this point. Trying to understand.
I work a full time job that was previously almost entirely in-person job to a 100% remote one and get the challenges. But it’s also not that much different than when I had meetings in person. I prepare material and an agenda and I conduct the conversation by video conference. How is it so different for teachers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have more meetings than ever before (ZOOM) and lesson preps, work plans emailed home, lots of parent correspondence, ZOOM class meetings.!!
---Teacher and mom
So is this what fills the other 7 hours of the day beyond the 45 minute class? Also I’m not getting work plans emailed from my teacher. It’s zoom class and a few links to other video-based learning.
Different teacher and mom here. Like most secondary teachers, I have more than one prep. So I’m conducting more than one 45 minute class, planning more than one 45 min class, and assessing more than one subject. One of my preps is a course for which there are not supplemental materials readily available via a Google search. To put together a 45 min lesson normal, I invested about 90 min of planning previously. Now, that has doubled as well because I don’t have access to the places I used to get materials from.
The other teacher wasn’t joking about the paperwork. That has not abated at all. On 3/12, I filled out screening paperwork for a child. The child’s doctor misplaced it and only let me know yesterday. That paperwork took me an hour when it was fresh in my head. No telling how long it will take now.
And there’s trainings, team meetings, and emails revising what were told my admin an hour before.
I’m not complaining. We are all in this together. But please stop your claims that teachers are not working. For the most part, we are working as hard as before, just differently. And spending even more money out of our own pockets to fill the gap between what MCPS provides and what is, in fact, needed to do our jobs. We are limited by rules that MCPS is putting in place. These rules do seem to be for the welfare of the students, but if you dislike them, don’t blame the teachers and don’t blame the union. Someone on DCUM is spreading the rumor that MCEA got a 2 hour break for teachers. That’s completely false. The break is for students to travel to pick up lunches and then eat. I have a daily Zoom meeting in that time frame.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have more meetings than ever before (ZOOM) and lesson preps, work plans emailed home, lots of parent correspondence, ZOOM class meetings.!!
---Teacher and mom
So is this what fills the other 7 hours of the day beyond the 45 minute class? Also I’m not getting work plans emailed from my teacher. It’s zoom class and a few links to other video-based learning.
Anonymous wrote:We have more meetings than ever before (ZOOM) and lesson preps, work plans emailed home, lots of parent correspondence, ZOOM class meetings.!!
---Teacher and mom