Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1/2 day hybrid is useless. Who wants to drop off their kid and go back and get them at noon every day? Why not cohorts and alternating days or weeks?
I agree. So you rush to pick up your kid at lunch and then you have to figure out distance learning and childcare in the afternoon? Hard pass.
Can anyone explain why they are doing 1/2 days? I am sure the teachers will protest in October too and school will be online indefinitely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1/2 day hybrid is useless. Who wants to drop off their kid and go back and get them at noon every day? Why not cohorts and alternating days or weeks?
I agree. So you rush to pick up your kid at lunch and then you have to figure out distance learning and childcare in the afternoon? Hard pass.
Anonymous wrote:1/2 day hybrid is useless. Who wants to drop off their kid and go back and get them at noon every day? Why not cohorts and alternating days or weeks?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what else the HOS could have done, if almost all teachers are refusing to teach in person. Hard to hold class if there are no teachers! I agree with the other posters that parents needed to be given a HUGE heads up about this likelihood a few weeks ago. Also, having the kids eventually return to school for 1/2 days is idiotic. Many parents will have to get child care for the other 1/2 of the day. Why wouldn’t you do a hybrid model?
The HOS should DO HIS JOB and manage the teachers and school!
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what else the HOS could have done, if almost all teachers are refusing to teach in person. Hard to hold class if there are no teachers! I agree with the other posters that parents needed to be given a HUGE heads up about this likelihood a few weeks ago. Also, having the kids eventually return to school for 1/2 days is idiotic. Many parents will have to get child care for the other 1/2 of the day. Why wouldn’t you do a hybrid model?
Anonymous wrote:Fire the teachers and refund parents.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, so what we are learning across all schools is that teachers’ wants and needs come before anyone else’s.
Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Our kids are not at Burgundy, but I have friends there. I got an email from Arlington Magazine just days after APS announced a virtual start that was an ad from Burgundy advertising 5 days on campus in person.
I sent it to friends at Burgundy. All of our reactions were that it was a dangerous, dumb money grab.