Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the second wave hits in October everything will shut down again. You will have two months of hybrid tops.
No. Stop fearmongering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop the gross speculation. Just stop.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Interestingly a number of universities (and maybe high schools) are looking at this from a space-availability standpoint: how many classrooms are empty per hour (including nights and weekends). They are looking at schedule readjustments to maximize the number of classrooms available for various sections to meet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question about a hybrid model is about staffing. Do schools hire twice as many teachers or are they expecting teachers to expose themselves to the same
Number of children pre-pandemic? These ideas about teachers floating in to a static student group still scare me as a parent. Whose to say one teacher doesn’t pick up something from one student group and pass it to another?
No additional teachers, kids come half as often. Either half days or 2 days a week or every other week (4 days a week).
Right, but this way the teachers are still mixing between cohorts. I don't see a way around that for larger privates with more than 18 students per class. Current CDC guidelines recommend no more than 10 per cohort total, including the teacher. (So, one teacher and 9 students.) The teachers can absolutely be vectors between cohorts, rendering the model pretty ineffective for transmission control (and contact tracing--the idea of stable cohorts was to allow one cohort to be absent due to illness while others carried on, if there's cohort mixing even by staff, then it renders a whole-school or whole-grade shut down more likely).
A modular approach could work. 4 weeks of English class, all day, same kids, same teacher. Then 4 weeks of Math, then 4 weeks of Science... Would really reduce the mixing among cohorts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a miserable school exprience for high schoolers. They might as well stick with distance learning if that is how they re going to do it. This a a massive over-reaction IMO.
We. Are. In. A. Pandemic. We will get through to the other side relatively soon, but not in six months.
This is only miserable if measured against what happens during normal times. These aren’t normal times. A lot of people remain in denial about this. After two months, it’s time to graduate to another stage of grief, folks.
Anonymous wrote:DC's reopening plan is here:
https://cdn.flipsnack.com/widget/v2/flipsnackwidget.html?hash=funqraelc&t=&fullscreen=1
On page 19 there is a chart by sector, for K-12 education Phase 1 is “distance learning only” and Phase 2 and 3 are lumped together. In terms of when they expect to change phases, Phase 1 is “Declining virus transmission” and will start on Friday, Phase 2 is “Only localized transmission” and the Mayor said could happen by August 10.
On page 32 there is specific guidance for K-12 schools. The things that jump out at me are a limit of 10 people in a classroom at a time, strict physical distancing and enhanced cleaning. Pages 34-38 are “Recommended Safeguards” for schools.
Phase 4 is a vaccine or a cure.
Bowser has said that DC is going to coordinate with MD and VA in the DC region.
Independent schools can be stricter but they can't be less strict than the guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a miserable school exprience for high schoolers. They might as well stick with distance learning if that is how they re going to do it. This a a massive over-reaction IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC's reopening plan is here:
https://cdn.flipsnack.com/widget/v2/flipsnackwidget.html?hash=funqraelc&t=&fullscreen=1
On page 19 there is a chart by sector, for K-12 education Phase 1 is “distance learning only” and Phase 2 and 3 are lumped together. In terms of when they expect to change phases, Phase 1 is “Declining virus transmission” and will start on Friday, Phase 2 is “Only localized transmission” and the Mayor said could happen by August 10.
On page 32 there is specific guidance for K-12 schools. The things that jump out at me are a limit of 10 people in a classroom at a time, strict physical distancing and enhanced cleaning. Pages 34-38 are “Recommended Safeguards” for schools.
Phase 4 is a vaccine or a cure.
Bowser has said that DC is going to coordinate with MD and VA in the DC region.
Independent schools can be stricter but they can't be less strict than the guidelines.
Thanks for that link. Our school head said ‘we won’t necessarily follow what the DC public schools opt to do, but we will absolutely follow the public health guidelines as a minimum’. I think this really indicates that ‘full classes school’ is highly unlikely barring a near miraculous decrease in cases.
Anonymous wrote:
This is what all the schools should be saying! Isn't part of what you pay for increased staff ratios and facilities/space?? They ought to be able to make the guidelines work 5 days a week at many of these schools, unlike at DCPS where they have many more kids per classroom and fewer staff members.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC's reopening plan is here:
https://cdn.flipsnack.com/widget/v2/flipsnackwidget.html?hash=funqraelc&t=&fullscreen=1
On page 19 there is a chart by sector, for K-12 education Phase 1 is “distance learning only” and Phase 2 and 3 are lumped together. In terms of when they expect to change phases, Phase 1 is “Declining virus transmission” and will start on Friday, Phase 2 is “Only localized transmission” and the Mayor said could happen by August 10.
On page 32 there is specific guidance for K-12 schools. The things that jump out at me are a limit of 10 people in a classroom at a time, strict physical distancing and enhanced cleaning. Pages 34-38 are “Recommended Safeguards” for schools.
Phase 4 is a vaccine or a cure.
Bowser has said that DC is going to coordinate with MD and VA in the DC region.
Independent schools can be stricter but they can't be less strict than the guidelines.
Thanks for that link. Our school head said ‘we won’t necessarily follow what the DC public schools opt to do, but we will absolutely follow the public health guidelines as a minimum’. I think this really indicates that ‘full classes school’ is highly unlikely barring a near miraculous decrease in cases.