Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day all schools will be in person by the end of the year, except MCPS, GDS and Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are DC privates seemingly the only private schools in the country that are doing full DL? I have friends with kids in privates in Chicago, Seattle, CT, Florida and even Manhattan (FFS) who are back at school between two and five days a week. Our COVID rates are just as low or lower than most of those places. And we have space to have the kids outside (versus some of the NYC schools.). Every day that goes by, we get closer to winter/cold weather/flu season, and I get more frustrated. What will it take for DC privates to have kids on campus in any capacity?
More leftist politics from schools, teachers and small group of parents. Everyone else remains silent. Kids in DC get another semester of subpar education and social development. And then another and another.
Aww, subpar.
There's a global pandemic, and our country is the worst in the world at containing it, but aww, your beautiful future world leader is going to get a second or third subpar semester in social development. Boo.
You need to updated your propaganda, it’s dated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are DC privates seemingly the only private schools in the country that are doing full DL? I have friends with kids in privates in Chicago, Seattle, CT, Florida and even Manhattan (FFS) who are back at school between two and five days a week. Our COVID rates are just as low or lower than most of those places. And we have space to have the kids outside (versus some of the NYC schools.). Every day that goes by, we get closer to winter/cold weather/flu season, and I get more frustrated. What will it take for DC privates to have kids on campus in any capacity?
More leftist politics from schools, teachers and small group of parents. Everyone else remains silent. Kids in DC get another semester of subpar education and social development. And then another and another.
Aww, subpar.
There's a global pandemic, and our country is the worst in the world at containing it, but aww, your beautiful future world leader is going to get a second or third subpar semester in social development. Boo.
You need to updated your propaganda, it’s dated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are DC privates seemingly the only private schools in the country that are doing full DL? I have friends with kids in privates in Chicago, Seattle, CT, Florida and even Manhattan (FFS) who are back at school between two and five days a week. Our COVID rates are just as low or lower than most of those places. And we have space to have the kids outside (versus some of the NYC schools.). Every day that goes by, we get closer to winter/cold weather/flu season, and I get more frustrated. What will it take for DC privates to have kids on campus in any capacity?
More leftist politics from schools, teachers and small group of parents. Everyone else remains silent. Kids in DC get another semester of subpar education and social development. And then another and another.
Aww, subpar.
There's a global pandemic, and our country is the worst in the world at containing it, but aww, your beautiful future world leader is going to get a second or third subpar semester in social development. Boo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are DC privates seemingly the only private schools in the country that are doing full DL? I have friends with kids in privates in Chicago, Seattle, CT, Florida and even Manhattan (FFS) who are back at school between two and five days a week. Our COVID rates are just as low or lower than most of those places. And we have space to have the kids outside (versus some of the NYC schools.). Every day that goes by, we get closer to winter/cold weather/flu season, and I get more frustrated. What will it take for DC privates to have kids on campus in any capacity?
More leftist politics from schools, teachers and small group of parents. Everyone else remains silent. Kids in DC get another semester of subpar education and social development. And then another and another.
Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day all schools will be in person by the end of the year, except MCPS, GDS and Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:Why are DC privates seemingly the only private schools in the country that are doing full DL? I have friends with kids in privates in Chicago, Seattle, CT, Florida and even Manhattan (FFS) who are back at school between two and five days a week. Our COVID rates are just as low or lower than most of those places. And we have space to have the kids outside (versus some of the NYC schools.). Every day that goes by, we get closer to winter/cold weather/flu season, and I get more frustrated. What will it take for DC privates to have kids on campus in any capacity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe some of it is the requirements that DC government has placed on the schools. These are the three that seem the most restrictive to adhere to:
No more than 12 total individuals clustered in one group, and no more than one group per room (so a school can't put more than 11 students in a huge space, like the gymnasium.)
Grouping the same students and staff together each day and throughout the day. (I'm not sure what this requirement means - but if it means students 1 through 10 need to stay together each time they are at school, high school is going to be almost impossible. High school students don't all take the same identical classes.)
No mixing between groups to include entry and exit of the building, at meal time, in the rest room, on the playground, in the hallway, and other shared spaces
It's this.
Most DC schools simply can't meet these requirements that exist in Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the reopening guidelines. They don't have enough space.
Also worth noting DC has some very strict metrics when it comes to reopening, as they are pretty much the only state/government reporting "percentage of infections from close contacts" which tracks how widespread the virus is moving vs. the effectiveness of contact tracers. The goal is 60% of new cases coming from contacts of existing cases (as it is in places like Hong Kong and Korea) but DC is currently averaging about 4 or 5%, meaning 95% of the cases are coming from unknown sources. Absent meeting that rather strict goal Phase 3 is far off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe some of it is the requirements that DC government has placed on the schools. These are the three that seem the most restrictive to adhere to:
No more than 12 total individuals clustered in one group, and no more than one group per room (so a school can't put more than 11 students in a huge space, like the gymnasium.)
Grouping the same students and staff together each day and throughout the day. (I'm not sure what this requirement means - but if it means students 1 through 10 need to stay together each time they are at school, high school is going to be almost impossible. High school students don't all take the same identical classes.)
No mixing between groups to include entry and exit of the building, at meal time, in the rest room, on the playground, in the hallway, and other shared spaces
It's this.
Most DC schools simply can't meet these requirements that exist in Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the reopening guidelines. They don't have enough space.
Also worth noting DC has some very strict metrics when it comes to reopening, as they are pretty much the only state/government reporting "percentage of infections from close contacts" which tracks how widespread the virus is moving vs. the effectiveness of contact tracers. The goal is 60% of new cases coming from contacts of existing cases (as it is in places like Hong Kong and Korea) but DC is currently averaging about 4 or 5%, meaning 95% of the cases are coming from unknown sources. Absent meeting that rather strict goal Phase 3 is far off.
Your argument does not apply to the best independent schools in dc at all. But it is even more political there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe some of it is the requirements that DC government has placed on the schools. These are the three that seem the most restrictive to adhere to:
No more than 12 total individuals clustered in one group, and no more than one group per room (so a school can't put more than 11 students in a huge space, like the gymnasium.)
Grouping the same students and staff together each day and throughout the day. (I'm not sure what this requirement means - but if it means students 1 through 10 need to stay together each time they are at school, high school is going to be almost impossible. High school students don't all take the same identical classes.)
No mixing between groups to include entry and exit of the building, at meal time, in the rest room, on the playground, in the hallway, and other shared spaces
It's this.
Most DC schools simply can't meet these requirements that exist in Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the reopening guidelines. They don't have enough space.
Also worth noting DC has some very strict metrics when it comes to reopening, as they are pretty much the only state/government reporting "percentage of infections from close contacts" which tracks how widespread the virus is moving vs. the effectiveness of contact tracers. The goal is 60% of new cases coming from contacts of existing cases (as it is in places like Hong Kong and Korea) but DC is currently averaging about 4 or 5%, meaning 95% of the cases are coming from unknown sources. Absent meeting that rather strict goal Phase 3 is far off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe some of it is the requirements that DC government has placed on the schools. These are the three that seem the most restrictive to adhere to:
No more than 12 total individuals clustered in one group, and no more than one group per room (so a school can't put more than 11 students in a huge space, like the gymnasium.)
Grouping the same students and staff together each day and throughout the day. (I'm not sure what this requirement means - but if it means students 1 through 10 need to stay together each time they are at school, high school is going to be almost impossible. High school students don't all take the same identical classes.)
No mixing between groups to include entry and exit of the building, at meal time, in the rest room, on the playground, in the hallway, and other shared spaces
It's this.
Most DC schools simply can't meet these requirements that exist in Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the reopening guidelines. They don't have enough space.
Also worth noting DC has some very strict metrics when it comes to reopening, as they are pretty much the only state/government reporting "percentage of infections from close contacts" which tracks how widespread the virus is moving vs. the effectiveness of contact tracers. The goal is 60% of new cases coming from contacts of existing cases (as it is in places like Hong Kong and Korea) but DC is currently averaging about 4 or 5%, meaning 95% of the cases are coming from unknown sources. Absent meeting that rather strict goal Phase 3 is far off.