Anonymous wrote:we going back wednesday or what? lol
Anonymous wrote:Are some schools having virtual live classes? Our school is posting work online. Studies were done that meeting asynchronously was not effective at all.
Anonymous wrote:Are some schools having virtual live classes? Our school is posting work online. Studies were done that meeting asynchronously was not effective at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People really think out of school the whole week?
How are you this dumb?
Streets have not been plowed, ice is covering them. It's under 20 degrees today tonight will refreeze again. Plows are getting stuck on side streets.
There will be no school maybe Friday.
Why is it dumb? In no other country will schools be closed for a week due to one day of snow. I never missed one day of school due to snow growing up. I live in the northern hemisphere of another country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously? School might be closed for a week. Your kid will survive.
They will survive. But it is neither necessary nor very disruptive. Why can't attendance and stuff be optional?
Usually because there are safety issues for teachers and staff getting to school. If I were a teacher, I literally would not be able to come in. No plows on my road at all. Tried to get my car out and it got stuck. My neighborhood is accessible to metro only by car (or bike, which doesn’t work in the ice).
I guess you could ask school to open and have voluntary attendance for teachers and kids, and then it’s not actually an instructional day, just a babysitting day.
But that is OK. If you can't come in, can some of the kids and some of the teachers who live nearby still go to work? This is how I grew up.
My guess is none of the teachers at my kid's school would be able to afford to live within walking distance. Teaching isn't a well paid field.
+1
Teachers aren't living in Palisades, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously? School might be closed for a week. Your kid will survive.
They will survive. But it is neither necessary nor very disruptive. Why can't attendance and stuff be optional?
Usually because there are safety issues for teachers and staff getting to school. If I were a teacher, I literally would not be able to come in. No plows on my road at all. Tried to get my car out and it got stuck. My neighborhood is accessible to metro only by car (or bike, which doesn’t work in the ice).
I guess you could ask school to open and have voluntary attendance for teachers and kids, and then it’s not actually an instructional day, just a babysitting day.
But that is OK. If you can't come in, can some of the kids and some of the teachers who live nearby still go to work? This is how I grew up.
My guess is none of the teachers at my kid's school would be able to afford to live within walking distance. Teaching isn't a well paid field.
+1
Teachers aren't living in Palisades, lol.
Anonymous wrote:There is no reason schools can't open tomorrow. Teenagers have been out driving around to each others houses. This was fun but time to go back to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously? School might be closed for a week. Your kid will survive.
They will survive. But it is neither necessary nor very disruptive. Why can't attendance and stuff be optional?
Usually because there are safety issues for teachers and staff getting to school. If I were a teacher, I literally would not be able to come in. No plows on my road at all. Tried to get my car out and it got stuck. My neighborhood is accessible to metro only by car (or bike, which doesn’t work in the ice).
I guess you could ask school to open and have voluntary attendance for teachers and kids, and then it’s not actually an instructional day, just a babysitting day.
But that is OK. If you can't come in, can some of the kids and some of the teachers who live nearby still go to work? This is how I grew up.
My guess is none of the teachers at my kid's school would be able to afford to live within walking distance. Teaching isn't a well paid field.
Anonymous wrote:Are some schools having virtual live classes? Our school is posting work online. Studies were done that meeting asynchronously was not effective at all.