Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will they have the staff to cover lunches in classrooms and enough teachers to cover smaller classes spread out using MS space?
It says that they are going to cut out all specials--PE, music, art, etc-- and special education and repurpose those teachers as classroom teachers.
That's basically the warm-body theory of teaching.
One of my math teachers was actually the PE teacher. He might have known how to teach PE, but I didn't have him as a PE teacher so I don't know. He certainly did not know how to teach math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its all just for show. These are the only two realistic scenarios for fall in a world of limited funds: (1) school is back in session as usual, with a few extra precautions and (2) school is totally online.
There is huge political impetus for scenario (1) .
If daycares are operating as normal (for non-essential workers), then there is no justification for keeping schools closed. There is no way we will get to fall and still have the federal government working from home (mostly because the federal government is pretending COVIDis over). There is no way the federal goverment can go back to work until daycares are open.
MY bet is on scenario 1 and this report is just to make the people who put it together feel like they have a contingency plan.
+1
Unless something completely catastrophic happens with regard to the virus schools will be back. Maybe a few precautions like lunch in the classrooms. Nothing else is even remotely possible. The 2021 nonsense is just to placate the crazies.
Anonymous wrote:Its all just for show. These are the only two realistic scenarios for fall in a world of limited funds: (1) school is back in session as usual, with a few extra precautions and (2) school is totally online.
There is huge political impetus for scenario (1) .
If daycares are operating as normal (for non-essential workers), then there is no justification for keeping schools closed. There is no way we will get to fall and still have the federal government working from home (mostly because the federal government is pretending COVIDis over). There is no way the federal goverment can go back to work until daycares are open.
MY bet is on scenario 1 and this report is just to make the people who put it together feel like they have a contingency plan.
Anonymous wrote:The cost of just social distancing on the bus (and thorough cleaning after each run--there's no time for that) would be prohibitive. You would need so many more buses and drivers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will they have the staff to cover lunches in classrooms and enough teachers to cover smaller classes spread out using MS space?
It says that they are going to cut out all specials--PE, music, art, etc-- and special education and repurpose those teachers as classroom teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not realistic to expect teachers to teach in masks all day. It is deliberately vague as to whether they think students will be wearing masks. I can barely stand a mask for 30 minutes at the store, and I'm not trying to teach.
Is it realistic to expect child care providers to provide child care in masks all day? Is it realistic to expect children in child care to wear masks all day? Is it realistic to expect parents to go back to work without child care providers? Is it realistic to plan to open child care centers but keep schools closed?
Anonymous wrote:How will they have the staff to cover lunches in classrooms and enough teachers to cover smaller classes spread out using MS space?
Anonymous wrote:It's not realistic to expect teachers to teach in masks all day. It is deliberately vague as to whether they think students will be wearing masks. I can barely stand a mask for 30 minutes at the store, and I'm not trying to teach.