Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician's twins are in kindergarten with my son. Doctor mom says it's appalling how many kids she sees at school the day after they are sick in her office.
So, in 4 weeks, she's seen an appalling number of kids in school the very next day? What kind of school do your kids go to? We don't go into the classroom; not allowed. No way would I even know who was in school that day. I call BS.
You can call whatever you want.
We live overseas. She can set her own office hours and she frequently drops off or picks up her kids from school. Where parents wait for pick up they can see more than half the elementary kids who are either picked up by parents or who walk themselves home because very few ride the bus; most leave via one entrance. She sees a lot of kids at the school as patients because she speaks English. She says most days she is at school (which is not every day) she sees someone who came to see her the day before and is probably not ready to be back in school.
Why are you on the Va Public school forum? I call BS too!
Jesus. Some people work overseas for a year or two and then come back to DC. But if guess you've never met anyone from the State Department or military. My kids spent 4 years in Va public schools and next year we'll be back so chillax.
Which part of this is scandalous or BS-worthy? That there are parents who send their kids back to school the next day after seeing the doctor for an illness or the fact that in other countries doctors aren't locked in their offices 5 days a week and actually get to take their own kids to and from school and converse with other parents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician's twins are in kindergarten with my son. Doctor mom says it's appalling how many kids she sees at school the day after they are sick in her office.
So, in 4 weeks, she's seen an appalling number of kids in school the very next day? What kind of school do your kids go to? We don't go into the classroom; not allowed. No way would I even know who was in school that day. I call BS.
You can call whatever you want.
We live overseas. She can set her own office hours and she frequently drops off or picks up her kids from school. Where parents wait for pick up they can see more than half the elementary kids who are either picked up by parents or who walk themselves home because very few ride the bus; most leave via one entrance. She sees a lot of kids at the school as patients because she speaks English. She says most days she is at school (which is not every day) she sees someone who came to see her the day before and is probably not ready to be back in school.
Why are you on the Va Public school forum? I call BS too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician's twins are in kindergarten with my son. Doctor mom says it's appalling how many kids she sees at school the day after they are sick in her office.
So, in 4 weeks, she's seen an appalling number of kids in school the very next day? What kind of school do your kids go to? We don't go into the classroom; not allowed. No way would I even know who was in school that day. I call BS.
You can call whatever you want.
We live overseas. She can set her own office hours and she frequently drops off or picks up her kids from school. Where parents wait for pick up they can see more than half the elementary kids who are either picked up by parents or who walk themselves home because very few ride the bus; most leave via one entrance. She sees a lot of kids at the school as patients because she speaks English. She says most days she is at school (which is not every day) she sees someone who came to see her the day before and is probably not ready to be back in school.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PP. I won't send with a horrible cold that kept them up coughing or continually blowing nose. Minor cold yes..they can go on and on. I do the same for myself in terms of work. This isn't daycare. They are going for a reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician's twins are in kindergarten with my son. Doctor mom says it's appalling how many kids she sees at school the day after they are sick in her office.
So, in 4 weeks, she's seen an appalling number of kids in school the very next day? What kind of school do your kids go to? We don't go into the classroom; not allowed. No way would I even know who was in school that day. I call BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sure hope Ebola doesn't make it to DC schools. Cause it will be like "so what you have a little fever, suck it up and go to school"
Nobody was suggesting we send kids to school with a fever. Read the title! I'm at teacher, and I'm sure parents would be complaining if I was out everytime I or my toddler had a runny nose. I appreciate when parents ask for make-up work, but not everything can be made up (I'm not particularly pro-worksheets).
Anonymous wrote:
The kid would say 'I don't feel good" and mom let her stay home.
She just looks at me funny.
FWIW, I knew a mom who did keep her kid home. Guess what? Principal called and said the kid was missing too many days. (It was an awful lot of days.)