Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our charter does a lot of asymptomatic testing and after a calm fall did have a big jump last and this week. Along with conservative testing, conservative quarantine so many classes home this coming week.
Name the charter. Was it Halloween? Why are they quarantining full classes?
I won't name the school, mostly because I don't like how you asked.
How would we know if it was Halloween? We can guess but there is no way for parents to know how non-identified kids got Covid.
Why? Because that is their policy. Kids move around the rooms during the day and they can't really determine who is a close contact and lunch is done by classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our charter does a lot of asymptomatic testing and after a calm fall did have a big jump last and this week. Along with conservative testing, conservative quarantine so many classes home this coming week.
Name the charter. Was it Halloween? Why are they quarantining full classes?
Anonymous wrote:Our charter does a lot of asymptomatic testing and after a calm fall did have a big jump last and this week. Along with conservative testing, conservative quarantine so many classes home this coming week.
Anonymous wrote:There was a jump among people I know last week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asymptomatic testing positivity rate is down to .1 or .2% from .5-1% earlier in the year. This is tracking overall drop in cases across the city as well. Data so far suggests that there is not a lot of person to person transmission happening in school which is wonderful. So school rates tend to track larger community rates.
That’s awesome. Do you have a link to that data? I’m not questioning you, just genuinely curious because I’d like to track the asymptotic positive rates too.
DP, but here you go: https://coronavirus.dc.gov/page/covid-19-school-based-testing-program
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asymptomatic testing positivity rate is down to .1 or .2% from .5-1% earlier in the year. This is tracking overall drop in cases across the city as well. Data so far suggests that there is not a lot of person to person transmission happening in school which is wonderful. So school rates tend to track larger community rates.
That’s awesome. Do you have a link to that data? I’m not questioning you, just genuinely curious because I’d like to track the asymptotic positive rates too.
Anonymous wrote:Asymptomatic testing positivity rate is down to .1 or .2% from .5-1% earlier in the year. This is tracking overall drop in cases across the city as well. Data so far suggests that there is not a lot of person to person transmission happening in school which is wonderful. So school rates tend to track larger community rates.