Anonymous wrote:Hi all,
I am dismayed. Despite the teachers having full access to vaccines, 2 of my kid’s middle school teachers still have opted to stay home when the kids are in person next week.
How can APS justify this when a classroom full of kids are present? This is just so shameful. Teaching is an in perjob!
The standards are just getting worse and worse in APS.
Anonymous wrote:
This stuff doesn’t happen in private schools. The reason is parents would not tolerate it for 1 second. Here, the public school parents are letting the children go to school to be taught by monitors and then justifying this craziness on the boards. When can we all just put the students first for a change? Why can’t everyone just rise to the occasion and get our students on track? It should be outrageous to people that vaccinated teachers are taking leave in the middle of the school year just to avoid in person teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This stuff doesn’t happen in private schools. The reason is parents would not tolerate it for 1 second. Here, the public school parents are letting the children go to school to be taught by monitors and then justifying this craziness on the boards. When can we all just put the students first for a change? Why can’t everyone just rise to the occasion and get our students on track? It should be outrageous to people that vaccinated teachers are taking leave in the middle of the school year just to avoid in person teaching.
Clearly it is outrageous to some, others see that there are legitimate reasons why someone might need to take leave at this time.
This. They are taking unpaid leave to care for school-aged kids who are going to be home because of hybrid. Some are teaching from home until a sub can be found. The pandemic has affected them, too. Have a heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This stuff doesn’t happen in private schools. The reason is parents would not tolerate it for 1 second. Here, the public school parents are letting the children go to school to be taught by monitors and then justifying this craziness on the boards. When can we all just put the students first for a change? Why can’t everyone just rise to the occasion and get our students on track? It should be outrageous to people that vaccinated teachers are taking leave in the middle of the school year just to avoid in person teaching.
Clearly it is outrageous to some, others see that there are legitimate reasons why someone might need to take leave at this time.
Anonymous wrote:This stuff doesn’t happen in private schools. The reason is parents would not tolerate it for 1 second. Here, the public school parents are letting the children go to school to be taught by monitors and then justifying this craziness on the boards. When can we all just put the students first for a change? Why can’t everyone just rise to the occasion and get our students on track? It should be outrageous to people that vaccinated teachers are taking leave in the middle of the school year just to avoid in person teaching.
Anonymous wrote:This stuff doesn’t happen in private schools. The reason is parents would not tolerate it for 1 second. Here, the public school parents are letting the children go to school to be taught by monitors and then justifying this craziness on the boards. When can we all just put the students first for a change? Why can’t everyone just rise to the occasion and get our students on track? It should be outrageous to people that vaccinated teachers are taking leave in the middle of the school year just to avoid in person teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure in what universe people are celebrating fully vaccinated teachers staying home and abandoning children at school when the data shows the kids have fallen so behind. In my job, if l said this to my employer that l demand to work from home despite being vaccinated, then l would be fired.
I’m not sure what universe you’re living in. That’s not what is happening.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure in what universe people are celebrating fully vaccinated teachers staying home and abandoning children at school when the data shows the kids have fallen so behind. In my job, if l said this to my employer that l demand to work from home despite being vaccinated, then l would be fired.
Since in-person school this year is just distance learning taking place in the classroom two times a week, I fail to see how it makes a difference.
Then maybe you should pay more attention. The teachers will be in 4 days a week, not two. They will need to meet the needs of two groups of students in two different places, and manage the learning of students at home while making sure in-school students remain distant with masks on. They will need to clean desks in between classes (they have three minutes to do this between MS classes). They will need to sign students in and out for bathroom breaks. The list goes on and on.
*Students* will be there twice a week. Regardless of where teachers and students are physically located, teachers will have to manage student learning distanced from the students. Other teachers and staff supervise students to ensure they remain distanced, clean between classes, and do the bathroom stuff.
Honestly I’m not sure where you get the audacity to say I’m the one who needs to pay more attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure in what universe people are celebrating fully vaccinated teachers staying home and abandoning children at school when the data shows the kids have fallen so behind. In my job, if l said this to my employer that l demand to work from home despite being vaccinated, then l would be fired.
I’m not sure what universe you’re living in. That’s not what is happening.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure in what universe people are celebrating fully vaccinated teachers staying home and abandoning children at school when the data shows the kids have fallen so behind. In my job, if l said this to my employer that l demand to work from home despite being vaccinated, then l would be fired.