Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone summarize what the other DMV school districts are doing? I think the following, but please correct and/or add to what I have below:
Arlington public: Normal return to school on schedule 1/3/22, but extracurricular sports, theater, band etc cancelled for 2 weeks to reduce spread. There is symptomatic testing at Kenmore.[\b]
[b]DC public: Requiring negative covid test FIRST before kids can return to school. Kids who can't supply such a test will be sent home (though it seems more likely that schools will just do an in person test when kid shows up).
Fairfax public: Testing is open for symptomatic staff and kids I think, but otherwise schools starts as planned. Piloting test to stay at some schools.
Maryland: Testing? What is going on there, I don't know.
DMV privates: Most seem to be opening on time as far as I can tell. [b]Many seem to be following DC public’s lead by requiring a negative test to return to school, some having no school Monday or Tuesday to allow testing to happen.[\b]
Please add/edit this with correct info if you can. I almost started a new thread but didn't see a good place to put it.
According to the county board letter published on AEM, I suspect that Arlington can't do test to stay like DC is doing (wish we were doing this!) because of the intense shortage on tests.
I think you meant DC?
Yes, I totally meant DC public. Thank you (and thanks for the other corrections!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over on AEM…just another day in paradise where grammar is now racist
And the pro-voucher DBs are being flaming a-holes.
Just another day.
Anonymous wrote:Over on AEM…just another day in paradise where grammar is now racist
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This would have been nice and I favor safety (and love what DC schools are doing — their plan beats everyone else’s) but no way can APS implement anything like this at this point, Wednesday night before school starts again on Monday. Wish APS would have done this, but no way can they do it now. Ha ha. I wish.
I will just keep my kids in the weekly testing program and get them the best masks I can.
I favor kids’ health, and I know that health is much more than 1 respiratory virus that is less than flu level risk (prior to vaccines) and mental health is extremely important to kids after all that Arlington has robbed from our kids after 2 years in the fruitless paranoid view of “in an abundance of caution.”
That’s why our kids don’t wear masks except where legally required and we only get tested if we’re actually sick.
Us too. On a beach vacation now with other families, acting like normal. Kids are excited to be back at school on Monday. They’re very hopeful that masks will be gone on January 15th because they want to see their friends’ faces at school, not just outside of school. Even they know it’s all theater at school to make a few nutty parents “feel” their kids are safe.
Riiiiiiiight. Your kids figured that out all on their own huh.
I can't count the number of conversations I've been in where people complain about people they think are overly cautious, then look at me and say "oh but of course I'm not talking about you, you need to take the precautions for your at risk children (now child since only 1 is under 5)." Give me a break people. There are more of us with at risk kids than you realize. Maybe we're not waving our kids' health info under your noses every 5 minutes, but we're also not going to mass play dates where we know kids won't be masking, and we're not getting beach houses with y'all. We're still here even if you refuse to acknowledge us and our kids.
A child under 5 is not risk. Only COVIDian paranoid people think that.
And any truly at risk can handle COVID just like they do for the 200 other endemic respiratory viruses.
Children’s hospitals are filling up and pediatricians offices are stretched thin, yet here you are mocking concerned parents and calling them names. Disgusting and shameful.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/12/27/health/covid-kids-hospitals/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This would have been nice and I favor safety (and love what DC schools are doing — their plan beats everyone else’s) but no way can APS implement anything like this at this point, Wednesday night before school starts again on Monday. Wish APS would have done this, but no way can they do it now. Ha ha. I wish.
I will just keep my kids in the weekly testing program and get them the best masks I can.
I favor kids’ health, and I know that health is much more than 1 respiratory virus that is less than flu level risk (prior to vaccines) and mental health is extremely important to kids after all that Arlington has robbed from our kids after 2 years in the fruitless paranoid view of “in an abundance of caution.”
That’s why our kids don’t wear masks except where legally required and we only get tested if we’re actually sick.
Us too. On a beach vacation now with other families, acting like normal. Kids are excited to be back at school on Monday. They’re very hopeful that masks will be gone on January 15th because they want to see their friends’ faces at school, not just outside of school. Even they know it’s all theater at school to make a few nutty parents “feel” their kids are safe.
Riiiiiiiight. Your kids figured that out all on their own huh.
I can't count the number of conversations I've been in where people complain about people they think are overly cautious, then look at me and say "oh but of course I'm not talking about you, you need to take the precautions for your at risk children (now child since only 1 is under 5)." Give me a break people. There are more of us with at risk kids than you realize. Maybe we're not waving our kids' health info under your noses every 5 minutes, but we're also not going to mass play dates where we know kids won't be masking, and we're not getting beach houses with y'all. We're still here even if you refuse to acknowledge us and our kids.
A child under 5 is not risk. Only COVIDian paranoid people think that.
And any truly at risk can handle COVID just like they do for the 200 other endemic respiratory viruses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone summarize what the other DMV school districts are doing? I think the following, but please correct and/or add to what I have below:
Arlington public: Normal return to school on schedule 1/3/22, but extracurricular sports, theater, band etc cancelled for 2 weeks to reduce spread.
DC public: Requiring negative covid test FIRST before kids can return to school. Kids who can't supply such a test will be sent home (though it seems more likely that schools will just do an in person test when kid shows up).
Fairfax public: Testing is open for symptomatic staff and kids I think, but otherwise schools starts as planned. Piloting test to stay at some schools.
Maryland: Testing? What is going on there, I don't know.
DMV privates: Most seem to be opening on time as far as I can tell.
Please add/edit this with correct info if you can. I almost started a new thread but didn't see a good place to put it.
According to the county board letter published on AEM, I suspect that Arlington can't do test to stay like DC is doing (wish we were doing this!) because of the intense shortage on tests.
I think you meant DC?
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone summarize what the other DMV school districts are doing? I think the following, but please correct and/or add to what I have below:
Arlington public: Normal return to school on schedule 1/3/22, but extracurricular sports, theater, band etc cancelled for 2 weeks to reduce spread.there is symptomatic testing at Kenmore
DMV public: Requiring negative covid test FIRST before kids can return to school. Kids who can't supply such a test will be sent home (though it seems more likely that schools will just do an in person test when kid shows up).
Fairfax public: Testing is open for symptomatic staff and kids I think, but otherwise schools starts as planned.
Maryland: Testing? What is going on there, I don't know.
DMV privates: Most seem to be opening on time as far as I can tell.
Please add/edit this with correct info if you can. I almost started a new thread but didn't see a good place to put it.
According to the county board letter published on AEM, I suspect that Arlington can't do test to stay like DC is doing (wish we were doing this!) because of the intense shortage on tests.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone summarize what the other DMV school districts are doing? I think the following, but please correct and/or add to what I have below:
Arlington public: Normal return to school on schedule 1/3/22, but extracurricular sports, theater, band etc cancelled for 2 weeks to reduce spread.
DC public: Requiring negative covid test FIRST before kids can return to school. Kids who can't supply such a test will be sent home (though it seems more likely that schools will just do an in person test when kid shows up).
Fairfax public: Testing is open for symptomatic staff and kids I think, but otherwise schools starts as planned. Piloting test to stay at some schools.
Maryland: Testing? What is going on there, I don't know.
DMV privates: Most seem to be opening on time as far as I can tell.
Please add/edit this with correct info if you can. I almost started a new thread but didn't see a good place to put it.
According to the county board letter published on AEM, I suspect that Arlington can't do test to stay like DC is doing (wish we were doing this!) because of the intense shortage on tests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And now some jerk on AEM is suggesting the teachers should plan a sick-out to force APS to go virtual the next couple of weeks.
Ha. Nobody in my circle of colleagues wants to, or has even given thought to doing that. Does that person actually think teachers would want to switch to virtual?
ES Teacher
Anonymous wrote:And now some jerk on AEM is suggesting the teachers should plan a sick-out to force APS to go virtual the next couple of weeks.