Anonymous wrote:For anyone who wants to join a group of DC parents that is fighting to urgently implement test-to-stay in all DC daycares, see our materials below.
DC daycare advocacy guide: https://tinyurl.com/57sapzjy
Petition: https://chng.it/vTzRTQKGHf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a positive in my kid’s pk3 class and everyone had to quarantine. But kids that were absent that Friday did not.
That’s incentivizes me to consider keeping my kid home on Fridays…
Not sure if you’re serious but my thought is that your child wouldn’t be considered a close contact but the class will still go virtual. I doubt the PK teacher would come in to teach one kid (which is also the problem with the low vax rates/eligibility in these grades). I could be wrong though. Testing all on Monday morning would fix this, but probably be too chaotic.
Why wouldn’t the teacher come in for one kid? Where is the line? They come on for five kids or more? Virtual doesn’t really work for PK3 anyway so if the teacher isn’t coming in for one kid it’s not as if they are going to be doing an alternative virtual lesson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a positive in my kid’s pk3 class and everyone had to quarantine. But kids that were absent that Friday did not.
That’s incentivizes me to consider keeping my kid home on Fridays…
Not sure if you’re serious but my thought is that your child wouldn’t be considered a close contact but the class will still go virtual. I doubt the PK teacher would come in to teach one kid (which is also the problem with the low vax rates/eligibility in these grades). I could be wrong though. Testing all on Monday morning would fix this, but probably be too chaotic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a positive in my kid’s pk3 class and everyone had to quarantine. But kids that were absent that Friday did not.
That’s incentivizes me to consider keeping my kid home on Fridays…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a positive in my kid’s pk3 class and everyone had to quarantine. But kids that were absent that Friday did not.
That’s incentivizes me to consider keeping my kid home on Fridays…
Anonymous wrote:There was a positive in my kid’s pk3 class and everyone had to quarantine. But kids that were absent that Friday did not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For anyone who wants to join a group of DC parents that is fighting to urgently implement test-to-stay in all DC daycares, see our materials below.
DC daycare advocacy guide: https://tinyurl.com/57sapzjy
Petition: https://chng.it/vTzRTQKGHf
Yeah. There has to be something between the wear red walk outs and the no more masks dueling protests.
You've got a whole lot more going on in that petition than test to stay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support weekly testing or whatever it takes to make teachers/parents feel more comfortable. But man, waiting until 4 pm on Sundays to learn whether we have preschool for the week is going to get real old real fast.
If you test your kids now and they are negative then why would you need to wait until 4?
They shut the whole class down if any child tests positive. At least that’s what our principal told us.
That is annoying. I wish instead they had Monday morning tests to avoid total closure
Anonymous wrote:For anyone who wants to join a group of DC parents that is fighting to urgently implement test-to-stay in all DC daycares, see our materials below.
DC daycare advocacy guide: https://tinyurl.com/57sapzjy
Petition: https://chng.it/vTzRTQKGHf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support weekly testing or whatever it takes to make teachers/parents feel more comfortable. But man, waiting until 4 pm on Sundays to learn whether we have preschool for the week is going to get real old real fast.
If you test your kids now and they are negative then why would you need to wait until 4?
They shut the whole class down if any child tests positive. At least that’s what our principal told us.
Really? Our PK3 class had a positive last week and didn’t get shut down.
The exposure goes back two days. Last week tests were on Monday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support weekly testing or whatever it takes to make teachers/parents feel more comfortable. But man, waiting until 4 pm on Sundays to learn whether we have preschool for the week is going to get real old real fast.
If you test your kids now and they are negative then why would you need to wait until 4?
They shut the whole class down if any child tests positive. At least that’s what our principal told us.
Really? Our PK3 class had a positive last week and didn’t get shut down.
The exposure goes back two days. Last week tests were on Monday.
Hmm, our class has at a least three kids who had Covid over the break. I don’t immediately see a “recent exposure” exception but seems like wouldn’t make sense to make healthy kids stay home who had no chance of getting Covid. If they do that then this is literally all just theatre
Anonymous wrote:I support weekly testing or whatever it takes to make teachers/parents feel more comfortable. But man, waiting until 4 pm on Sundays to learn whether we have preschool for the week is going to get real old real fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support weekly testing or whatever it takes to make teachers/parents feel more comfortable. But man, waiting until 4 pm on Sundays to learn whether we have preschool for the week is going to get real old real fast.
If you test your kids now and they are negative then why would you need to wait until 4?
They shut the whole class down if any child tests positive. At least that’s what our principal told us.
Really? Our PK3 class had a positive last week and didn’t get shut down.
The exposure goes back two days. Last week tests were on Monday.