Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers are being consulted and are helping with converting the curriculum into something that can be used for distance learning. That is, of course, only one small element of the plans that should be taking place. It does not account for building management, health and safety for teachers/students/family, student and teacher absences, substitution plans, attendance requirements, required teacher instruction time, emergency planning, entry/exit protocols, etc, etc, etc
Yes teachers are helping with curriculum--but why make PK plans when there is no distance learning option? Communication is really not happening in any meaningful way. It's a clear case of the right hand has no idea what the left hand is doing.
Anonymous wrote:So I heard Bowser says she’s meeting with teachers and it has been productive. Has there really been no consultation at all? Are you sure?
Anonymous wrote:I just read through a lot of these chains. IMHO I think DCPS is doing it right. They are planning for an in person following guidelines and say they will go virtual if DC Health says it isn’t safe. What’s wrong with that? It sounds like the chancellor and mayor and DC Health are all working on this together. I work in a hospital and I see the doctors and nurses (and the rest of us admin types) move all day working, talking, dare I say laughing with masks on. We are not worried about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I heard Bowser says she’s meeting with teachers and it has been productive. Has there really been no consultation at all? Are you sure?
I'm sure. The union president has met with everyone, and the end result has been teachers are being told one thing while parents are being told another. When they assure you that ventilation is adequate, they're lying. When they tell you there will be extra cleaning, they're lying. When teachers tell you we don't always have trash bags, soap, paper towels, or air conditioning, that's the truth. When they tell you kids will be required to self-assess their own symptoms, that's the truth, and IT IS MADNESS. To be clear: there is no extra money, there is no extra staff, and the Mayor has stated she will not let anything teachers do affect her decision on schools.
As a parent who is otherwise pro schools opening, I am pissed. No extra money? Clearly we can’t just do nothing and re open it will take funds and staff. So sorry. In any case we are at a charter that already isn’t opening. This is just hell all around.
There is extra money. DCPS is receiving 22 million in CARES Act funding.
They are likely using it on all the lost revenue and unemployment. They 'can't' use enough for public schools...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I heard Bowser says she’s meeting with teachers and it has been productive. Has there really been no consultation at all? Are you sure?
I'm sure. The union president has met with everyone, and the end result has been teachers are being told one thing while parents are being told another. When they assure you that ventilation is adequate, they're lying. When they tell you there will be extra cleaning, they're lying. When teachers tell you we don't always have trash bags, soap, paper towels, or air conditioning, that's the truth. When they tell you kids will be required to self-assess their own symptoms, that's the truth, and IT IS MADNESS. To be clear: there is no extra money, there is no extra staff, and the Mayor has stated she will not let anything teachers do affect her decision on schools.
As a parent who is otherwise pro schools opening, I am pissed. No extra money? Clearly we can’t just do nothing and re open it will take funds and staff. So sorry. In any case we are at a charter that already isn’t opening. This is just hell all around.
There is extra money. DCPS is receiving 22 million in CARES Act funding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, they are not getting it right. DCPS, unlike surrounding school districts, CLOSED SCHOOL THREE WEEKS EARLY in the spring. Our kids not only had a crappy DL curriculum where they got little to no instruction time from their teachers, but then they stopped learning three weeks early.
DCPS has had months to prepare for different scenarios- numbers are going down, numbers are stable, numbers are going up, phase 1 2 3 or 4. But they clearly did not really have concrete plans for all scenarios. They were just banking on being in Phase 2 or 3 by the time the new school year started. Bad continuity planning.
And I'm willing to bet their DL plan is going to be horrific- probably little to no instruction time again in the name of "EQUITY".
I love our school and teachers, but it's hard to argue with the bolded. Our wonderful school gave us next to nothing this spring. We just had 40% of the school year cut.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers are making this way more difficult than it needs to be. Write out a few key demands such as adequate soap, hand sanitizer, PPEs, cleaning, smaller classrooms. If these are not met, plan ahead with your fellow teachers at your school to stage a mass walkout. Everyone will be sympathetic and the mayor will get you what you need especially when the press pays attention. But right now, when you fuss and whine about every little thing and refuse to even consider why it is important to get kids back in school, you just come across as a bunch of complainers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why teaching online what you would normally teach in the classroom is so difficult... Mute everyone, tell them you are taking questions at the end, and teach.
No, you don't understand. Have you been in a classroom recently? Particularly elementary? In college, I saw professors stand at the front of the room, give a lecture and then take questions at the end. That is not what instruction looks like in PK-12 schools.
Anonymous wrote:No, they are not getting it right. DCPS, unlike surrounding school districts, CLOSED SCHOOL THREE WEEKS EARLY in the spring. Our kids not only had a crappy DL curriculum where they got little to no instruction time from their teachers, but then they stopped learning three weeks early.
DCPS has had months to prepare for different scenarios- numbers are going down, numbers are stable, numbers are going up, phase 1 2 3 or 4. But they clearly did not really have concrete plans for all scenarios. They were just banking on being in Phase 2 or 3 by the time the new school year started. Bad continuity planning.
And I'm willing to bet their DL plan is going to be horrific- probably little to no instruction time again in the name of "EQUITY".
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why teaching online what you would normally teach in the classroom is so difficult... Mute everyone, tell them you are taking questions at the end, and teach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I heard Bowser says she’s meeting with teachers and it has been productive. Has there really been no consultation at all? Are you sure?
I'm sure. The union president has met with everyone, and the end result has been teachers are being told one thing while parents are being told another. When they assure you that ventilation is adequate, they're lying. When they tell you there will be extra cleaning, they're lying. When teachers tell you we don't always have trash bags, soap, paper towels, or air conditioning, that's the truth. When they tell you kids will be required to self-assess their own symptoms, that's the truth, and IT IS MADNESS. To be clear: there is no extra money, there is no extra staff, and the Mayor has stated she will not let anything teachers do affect her decision on schools.
As a parent who is otherwise pro schools opening, I am pissed. No extra money? Clearly we can’t just do nothing and re open it will take funds and staff. So sorry. In any case we are at a charter that already isn’t opening. This is just hell all around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers are making this way more difficult than it needs to be. Write out a few key demands such as adequate soap, hand sanitizer, PPEs, cleaning, smaller classrooms. If these are not met, plan ahead with your fellow teachers at your school to stage a mass walkout. Everyone will be sympathetic and the mayor will get you what you need especially when the press pays attention. But right now, when you fuss and whine about every little thing and refuse to even consider why it is important to get kids back in school, you just come across as a bunch of complainers.
+1. Many teachers did a crap job of distance learning in the spring. This is a nightmare we are going through but everyone needs to be flexible and step up including the teachers
Anonymous wrote:Teachers are making this way more difficult than it needs to be. Write out a few key demands such as adequate soap, hand sanitizer, PPEs, cleaning, smaller classrooms. If these are not met, plan ahead with your fellow teachers at your school to stage a mass walkout. Everyone will be sympathetic and the mayor will get you what you need especially when the press pays attention. But right now, when you fuss and whine about every little thing and refuse to even consider why it is important to get kids back in school, you just come across as a bunch of complainers.