Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 3 kids - 1 in preschool and 2 in elementary. It is hard enough getting these older kids to get to their live classrooms and do their assignments. Our preschool doesn’t want to return our tuition so they also have live instruction and assignments and activities. It is such a pain to do. There are parents where their preschool child is their only child or they have an infant and a preschool child. They do all these elaborate art projects and activities. I feel like absolute crap. I’m on the brink of a nervous break.
I need the world to open back up. I cannot handle being stuck at home. I will take the risk of getting coronavirus.
"I will take the risk of getting coronavirus."
That's the problematic thinking. If you really could risk only yourself, fine. But if you get infected you can still infect others even if you have no symptoms. So you're OK with infecting your family, with your infected but asymptomatic kids infecting teachers and classmates, with you and your spouse infecting total strangers as you go back to stores and kids' activities and back to school events. If you're about to argue that you will avoid infection and practice distancing etc.--really? If you can't deal with being at home, are you truly going to maintain mask and glove and distancing protocols for months to come?
This is why we will have a second wave of infections. Because of the "I can't stand being home" people and the "I can't take dealing with homeschooling plus job" people. We get that you are frazzled and overwhelmed. Why do you not get that there is a much bigger picture beyond the walls of your house? Take control of what's inside your home. Drop the preschooling and ramp back the elementary to whatever works -- plenty of parents on these threads have done just that. But please don't think that it's OK to say "I will take the risk of getting the virus" and that you are only risking yourself. You aren't. Can you see past your own cabin fever to understand that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op I agree with you. That’s why I think people have to start putting real pressure on local governments to reopen.
No, the solution is for OP to opt out of the preschool activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3, 8, 10 yr olds here and it is hard. All go to private school which decided to not do distance learning and retrned tuition. I'm on my own to teach the big kids and come up with their curriculum. While I'm teaching them, the 3 yr old gets naked somewhere and finds an ink pen. It is tricky to meet all school needs with a 3 yr old plus the constant cooking and cleaning. But we do the best we can. School had better be a go in the fall.
WHAT?!? Which school is that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 3 kids - 1 in preschool and 2 in elementary. It is hard enough getting these older kids to get to their live classrooms and do their assignments. Our preschool doesn’t want to return our tuition so they also have live instruction and assignments and activities. It is such a pain to do. There are parents where their preschool child is their only child or they have an infant and a preschool child. They do all these elaborate art projects and activities. I feel like absolute crap. I’m on the brink of a nervous break.
I need the world to open back up. I cannot handle being stuck at home. I will take the risk of getting coronavirus.
"I will take the risk of getting coronavirus."
That's the problematic thinking. If you really could risk only yourself, fine. But if you get infected you can still infect others even if you have no symptoms. So you're OK with infecting your family, with your infected but asymptomatic kids infecting teachers and classmates, with you and your spouse infecting total strangers as you go back to stores and kids' activities and back to school events. If you're about to argue that you will avoid infection and practice distancing etc.--really? If you can't deal with being at home, are you truly going to maintain mask and glove and distancing protocols for months to come?
This is why we will have a second wave of infections. Because of the "I can't stand being home" people and the "I can't take dealing with homeschooling plus job" people. We get that you are frazzled and overwhelmed. Why do you not get that there is a much bigger picture beyond the walls of your house? Take control of what's inside your home. Drop the preschooling and ramp back the elementary to whatever works -- plenty of parents on these threads have done just that. But please don't think that it's OK to say "I will take the risk of getting the virus" and that you are only risking yourself. You aren't. Can you see past your own cabin fever to understand that?
Anonymous wrote:3, 8, 10 yr olds here and it is hard. All go to private school which decided to not do distance learning and retrned tuition. I'm on my own to teach the big kids and come up with their curriculum. While I'm teaching them, the 3 yr old gets naked somewhere and finds an ink pen. It is tricky to meet all school needs with a 3 yr old plus the constant cooking and cleaning. But we do the best we can. School had better be a go in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:If they don't do the school work then they should have to repeat grade. You are the parent and it is your responsibility to ensure they do their classwork.
Anonymous wrote:
The other option is to not participate in all the activities. It’s not like you have high schoolers preparing to take online AP exams, like I have, and it’s safer than opening up before the state is ready just because you feel like you’re missing out...
Anonymous wrote:I have 3 kids - 1 in preschool and 2 in elementary. It is hard enough getting these older kids to get to their live classrooms and do their assignments. Our preschool doesn’t want to return our tuition so they also have live instruction and assignments and activities. It is such a pain to do. There are parents where their preschool child is their only child or they have an infant and a preschool child. They do all these elaborate art projects and activities. I feel like absolute crap. I’m on the brink of a nervous break.
I need the world to open back up. I cannot handle being stuck at home. I will take the risk of getting coronavirus.
Anonymous wrote:If they don't do the school work then they should have to repeat grade. You are the parent and it is your responsibility to ensure they do their classwork.