Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 friends/classmates of my 5th grade dd + dd. We will rotate houses, Tu-F. When it’s your day you figure out how to oversee the kids. A couple of dual working parents who will either take turns with the spouse (so each spouse gets one day every 2 weeks) or have a sitter/nanny available that day. A couple of SAH parents. As far as I know some families will have different pods for their other kids. In any case they won’t be included in this one.
We’ve known the families and kids for years and don’t anticipate any problems with the possible exception of needing to shuffle days around, which everyone is prepared for. The hours will be per the school bell schedule.
I would not agree to anything more complicated than this arrangement, including different age groups or kids we don’t know well.
THIS MAXIMIZES YOUR EXPOSURE AND IS WHY PODS ARE A BAD IDEA.
Apologies for shouting, but this is the example of what not to do: rotating locations rapidly, rotating caregivers rapidly, AND overlapping pods. It's the worst possible pod situation.
Right. It is way way riskier than a licensed learning center/daycare-run pod where parents have minimal/no contact at pickup, they are in the same space with the same kids that is cleaned daily, and there are only two teachers per room (who are background checked, too).
Anonymous wrote:I have a child who has 3 friends that we said we would pod with. We don’t have class assignments or school schedules. I am a SAHM and the other 3 families have work from home parents. All four families have 3 kids each and kids are different ages.
We have no specific details, no tutor, no discussion of meeting times. I’m wondering if this will end up just being play dates.
I joined a few Facebook groups about pods and it has a bunch of parents looking to join or create pods for various ages and schools.
What is your pod arrangement?
Is it childcare sharing? Are you hiring someone to lead the pod or will the parents take turns?
Anonymous wrote:Time to back out, OP. The others didn't prepare anything because they were expecting you to do all the work...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 friends/classmates of my 5th grade dd + dd. We will rotate houses, Tu-F. When it’s your day you figure out how to oversee the kids. A couple of dual working parents who will either take turns with the spouse (so each spouse gets one day every 2 weeks) or have a sitter/nanny available that day. A couple of SAH parents. As far as I know some families will have different pods for their other kids. In any case they won’t be included in this one.
We’ve known the families and kids for years and don’t anticipate any problems with the possible exception of needing to shuffle days around, which everyone is prepared for. The hours will be per the school bell schedule.
I would not agree to anything more complicated than this arrangement, including different age groups or kids we don’t know well.
THIS MAXIMIZES YOUR EXPOSURE AND IS WHY PODS ARE A BAD IDEA.
Apologies for shouting, but this is the example of what not to do: rotating locations rapidly, rotating caregivers rapidly, AND overlapping pods. It's the worst possible pod situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like these pods are going to just increase community spread like crazy. They closed schools for a reason folks.
There’s a difference between limiting a potential outbreak to a group of 4 kids and their families and having a classroom outbreak, or spread around on a bus containing kids from many different classrooms.
The big rallying cry in many districts was to protect the teachers. Pods achieve that.
This is a dire situation where parents need to work while kids need to engage in learning. By all means, make suggestions that allow that to happen while avoiding live school AND small private arrangements/ pods. We’ll wait.
I gave up a lucrative career to spend time with my children. I haven't regretted it for a moment. Maybe you need to reexamine your priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like these pods are going to just increase community spread like crazy. They closed schools for a reason folks.
There’s a difference between limiting a potential outbreak to a group of 4 kids and their families and having a classroom outbreak, or spread around on a bus containing kids from many different classrooms.
The big rallying cry in many districts was to protect the teachers. Pods achieve that.
This is a dire situation where parents need to work while kids need to engage in learning. By all means, make suggestions that allow that to happen while avoiding live school AND small private arrangements/ pods. We’ll wait.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you are a sahm. This pod idea doesn’t benefit you or your kids. You’d be better off staying out of a pod and focusing on your own kids. No exposure risk and you can focus on their education and your other kids. Drop out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 friends/classmates of my 5th grade dd + dd. We will rotate houses, Tu-F. When it’s your day you figure out how to oversee the kids. A couple of dual working parents who will either take turns with the spouse (so each spouse gets one day every 2 weeks) or have a sitter/nanny available that day. A couple of SAH parents. As far as I know some families will have different pods for their other kids. In any case they won’t be included in this one.
We’ve known the families and kids for years and don’t anticipate any problems with the possible exception of needing to shuffle days around, which everyone is prepared for. The hours will be per the school bell schedule.
I would not agree to anything more complicated than this arrangement, including different age groups or kids we don’t know well.
THIS MAXIMIZES YOUR EXPOSURE AND IS WHY PODS ARE A BAD IDEA.
Apologies for shouting, but this is the example of what not to do: rotating locations rapidly, rotating caregivers rapidly, AND overlapping pods. It's the worst possible pod situation.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like these pods are going to just increase community spread like crazy. They closed schools for a reason folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 friends/classmates of my 5th grade dd + dd. We will rotate houses, Tu-F. When it’s your day you figure out how to oversee the kids. A couple of dual working parents who will either take turns with the spouse (so each spouse gets one day every 2 weeks) or have a sitter/nanny available that day. A couple of SAH parents. As far as I know some families will have different pods for their other kids. In any case they won’t be included in this one.
We’ve known the families and kids for years and don’t anticipate any problems with the possible exception of needing to shuffle days around, which everyone is prepared for. The hours will be per the school bell schedule.
I would not agree to anything more complicated than this arrangement, including different age groups or kids we don’t know well.
THIS MAXIMIZES YOUR EXPOSURE AND IS WHY PODS ARE A BAD IDEA.
Apologies for shouting, but this is the example of what not to do: rotating locations rapidly, rotating caregivers rapidly, AND overlapping pods. It's the worst possible pod situation.
Someone who is in this type of pod situation likely would’ve wanted in-person school and doesn’t mind.