Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/07/18/the-risks-of-keeping-schools-closed-far-outweigh-the-benefits?fbclid=IwAR3aWHwHAUu3yCEdbtG0aywVXZNz_v3scNGhdW0i6nEglfeX510KUxQuH4k
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“Education is the surest path out of poverty. Depriving children of it will doom them to poorer, shorter, less fulfilling lives. The World Bank estimates that five months of school closures would cut lifetime earnings for the children who are affected by $10trn in today’s money, equivalent to 7% of current annual GDP.
With such catastrophic potential losses, governments should be working out how to reopen schools as soon as it is safe. This should not be a partisan issue, as it has sadly become in America, where some people assume it is a bad idea simply because President Donald Trump proposes it. In some countries teachers’ unions have been obstructive, partly out of justified concern for public health as cases climb, but also because teachers’ interests are not the same as children’s—especially if they are being paid whether they work or not. The main union in Los Angeles urges that schools remain closed until a long wishlist of demands has been met, including the elusive dream of universal health care in America. Children cannot wait that long.”
The Wall Street Journal recently had an article that said the same thing. They said keeping the high schools closed will create juvenile delinquency in the cities. The poor will be hurt the most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die.
There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher.
The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts.
If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment?
Fear does not equate to facts. The long term negative impact on children is a fact. Teachers were screaming for shutdowns for the fall before schools were provided the opportunity to demonstrate their plan.
Either step up and do the job or find another profession. (See all other open businesses and their employees.)
Anonymous wrote:https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/07/18/the-risks-of-keeping-schools-closed-far-outweigh-the-benefits?fbclid=IwAR3aWHwHAUu3yCEdbtG0aywVXZNz_v3scNGhdW0i6nEglfeX510KUxQuH4k
Text available here for those that don’t have a Subscription- https://outline.com/stat1k/
“Education is the surest path out of poverty. Depriving children of it will doom them to poorer, shorter, less fulfilling lives. The World Bank estimates that five months of school closures would cut lifetime earnings for the children who are affected by $10trn in today’s money, equivalent to 7% of current annual GDP.
With such catastrophic potential losses, governments should be working out how to reopen schools as soon as it is safe. This should not be a partisan issue, as it has sadly become in America, where some people assume it is a bad idea simply because President Donald Trump proposes it. In some countries teachers’ unions have been obstructive, partly out of justified concern for public health as cases climb, but also because teachers’ interests are not the same as children’s—especially if they are being paid whether they work or not. The main union in Los Angeles urges that schools remain closed until a long wishlist of demands has been met, including the elusive dream of universal health care in America. Children cannot wait that long.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die.
There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher.
The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts.
If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment?
I’m shocked to hear schools don’t have soap in the bathrooms. That being said I am CERTAIN parents or even strangers would be more than happy to donate to the school if that’s so it takes to reopen. I don’t have kids but I’d gladly restock your school singlehandedly! Sadly I do think there are some teachers who don’t want to reopen at all if they have to take any risk whatsoever and there still getting paid. They should feel more sense of responsibility for the future of our children. Imagine if our healthcare workers refused to help patients until some long list of demands were met. Teachers play just as big a role in the (social, intellectual, emotional) health of our society as healthcare workers do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die.
There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher.
The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts.
If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment?
I’m shocked to hear schools don’t have soap in the bathrooms. That being said I am CERTAIN parents or even strangers would be more than happy to donate to the school if that’s so it takes to reopen. I don’t have kids but I’d gladly restock your school singlehandedly! Sadly I do think there are some teachers who don’t want to reopen at all if they have to take any risk whatsoever and there still getting paid. They should feel more sense of responsibility for the future of our children. Imagine if our healthcare workers refused to help patients until some long list of demands were met. Teachers play just as big a role in the (social, intellectual, emotional) health of our society as healthcare workers do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who think we should open the school, under what conditions would you close them? Do you ever think the risks outweigh the benefits? Be specific.
Closing a school should be based SOLELY on the infection rate and cases in the county/town. Closing should be a last resort not the other way around. Close bars, indoor dining, churches, limit retail, mandatory masks, etc.
The fact that bars and indoor dining is open and schools are closed shows the priorities of a community.
So what is that infection rate? Does the new data showing kids 10-19 are the worst spreaders change your mind at all?
The data doesn't show that. I notice you didn't link to a source with such evidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who think we should open the school, under what conditions would you close them? Do you ever think the risks outweigh the benefits? Be specific.
Closing a school should be based SOLELY on the infection rate and cases in the county/town. Closing should be a last resort not the other way around. Close bars, indoor dining, churches, limit retail, mandatory masks, etc.
The fact that bars and indoor dining is open and schools are closed shows the priorities of a community.
So what is that infection rate? Does the new data showing kids 10-19 are the worst spreaders change your mind at all?
Anonymous wrote:Look at how much money and thought is being put into bringing professional sports back so the players are safe. If half that thought (not even the money, just the thought) had been put into reopening schools I’d have no qualms about reopening. But we made the short sighted economic choice to open bars and restaurants, people are traveling, IKEA is as crowded as a spring break beach. It feels better now but the long term effects are going to be so much worse.
Everything should have stayed shut down and schools should have reopened early and first. That would have required strong and consistent national policy and messaging to convince people that don’t have children that it’s in their best interest to have kids in school instead of being able to return to their lives. We just don’t have that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die.
There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher.
The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts.
If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment?
Fear does not equate to facts. The long term negative impact on children is a fact. Teachers were screaming for shutdowns for the fall before schools were provided the opportunity to demonstrate their plan.
Either step up and do the job or find another profession. (See all other open businesses and their employees.)
Anonymous wrote:Uh no. teachers are—to put it simply—scared to die.
There’s a pandemic and if schools hadn’t closed in march, the death toll would have been much higher.
The political part of this is how terribly Trump has handled it for months and months, calling it a hoax, never wearing a mask, pitting states against each other for proper equipment, firing the pandemic team long before this happened, refusing to listen to top health experts.
If teachers had proper PPE and schools could have soap and paper towels, maybe they wouldn’t be so scared, but my kids in McPs —a wealthy county —often don’t even have soap in the bathrooms. How the hell can they keep the virus at bay without the proper equipment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who think we should open the school, under what conditions would you close them? Do you ever think the risks outweigh the benefits? Be specific.
Closing a school should be based SOLELY on the infection rate and cases in the county/town. Closing should be a last resort not the other way around. Close bars, indoor dining, churches, limit retail, mandatory masks, etc.
The fact that bars and indoor dining is open and schools are closed shows the priorities of a community.
So what is that infection rate? Does the new data showing kids 10-19 are the worst spreaders change your mind at all?
You need to provide a cite for this or it will be ignored.