Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
When are teachers supposed to do their grades then?
Why does he have to make concessions to these people? That was a planned work day.
It’s not like we used all of our snow days yet!?
Don't we only have 5? In which case they will all be used as of tomorrow...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
When are teachers supposed to do their grades then?
Why does he have to make concessions to these people? That was a planned work day.
It’s not like we used all of our snow days yet!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
When are teachers supposed to do their grades then?
Why does he have to make concessions to these people? That was a planned work day.
It’s not like we used all of our snow days yet!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
When are teachers supposed to do their grades then?
Why does he have to make concessions to these people? That was a planned work day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
When are teachers supposed to do their grades then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Yes, grade prep
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Was that originally set as a teacher workday or something?
Anonymous wrote:Looks like APS will now go to school on Jan 31st (from the superintendent's announcements in the board presentation tonight)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gee golly. I wonder how schools in other parts of the good old U.S.A. and rest of the world that have school plus COVID are managing to open. A REAL MYSTERY.
FFS, APS.
How exactly should they have opened?
What specifically would you have done differently?
How are falls church city and DCPS opening?
FCC provides childcare for teachers' children - that's how they were able to open last year.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think paying teachers more is going to help magically create enough back up care for an entire school system. But it would love to see them paid more.
Anonymous wrote:Just want to say my kids' $30K+ per year private school (which I only put them in because I had 0 trust in APS this year) is open today. They're on their way to school now. They were open yesterday too.
And the admins are all subbing too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just want to say my kids' $30K+ per year private school (which I only put them in because I had 0 trust in APS this year) is open today. They're on their way to school now. They were open yesterday too.
And the admins are all subbing too.
I wonder how the cost of these past two days of admins babysitting your kids compares with the cost of back up childcare. I'd doubt they're getting a quality education with staff stretched, and I doubt the public school kids are suffering massive learning loss these past few days. Its the daily scramble and uncertainty that is breaking parents who have already been broken many times the past two years.
On second thought I just did the math. $30K/180 school days = $167 per day. Divide that by 7 hours of school and you're paying $24 and hour. That seems like a steal for back up childcare. Too bad school teachers aren't paid enough to afford that. We might not need as many subs to cover when they have to take care of their own kids when they're sick or a close contact.