Anonymous wrote:Meanwhile, local Catholic schools and many other school districts around the country opened back up in August.
Anonymous wrote:The public charter schools are proving that their claim that they are more flexible and nimble than regular public schools is absolutely false. They have failed to come up with plans for providing in-person learning because the staff simply does not want to provide in-person learning and their leadership supports them above everything else. They are not following the the science and the data even though they proclaim to be doing so. For reasons I do not understand, DC parents/guardians are complacent. I support public education 100%, but this has made me seriously waiver and I have lost a lot of respect for public school teachers and their leadership. The research is in: distance learning is no good so stop acting like it is a way to provide a quality education. It is crap. And stop acting like you care about the disadvantaged students because you don’t - if you did, the teachers would be double-masked and wearing face shields and the charter schools would be open. We are at a charter and it is one big disappointment. And before you all start making assumptions: we are African-American, with some health issues that worry us, but we would have our kids doing some hybrid program in a second if offered the opportunity because they are suffering academically and in terms of mental health. But according to the charters, my type of family does not want in-person learning. That is complete BS - I know that my brown kids who are already disadvantaged in this society will only be set back even further because of the schools’ failure to actually give a damn and follow the science.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LAMB has been making detailed plans to reopen late Jan or early Feb, including asking for commitment to hybrid or virtual for that date. Mundo Verde has plans to reopen on Feb 1.
If no other charters, or DCPS, do this, then I doubt they will follow through. [/quote
Predictably, LAMB announced yesterday it will no longer open for hybrid in late Jan./early Feb. No rescheduled date announced.
The school will just end up following what DPCS and/or other charters do.
And on that note, anyone know of any private schools taking children for the remainder of the year?
You need to call around. Try WES, Grace Episcopal, Lowell. It will depend on the school and grade.
Anonymous wrote:Here are the LEAs' plans: https://osse.dc.gov/publication/lea-continuous-education-plans
I believe that KIPP, Friendship, Meridian, Truth, and BASIS all have at least some students coming into their buildings, but I don't know whether they are getting direct education from teachers or whether it's a learning hub model where they are watching DL from the school building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LAMB has been making detailed plans to reopen late Jan or early Feb, including asking for commitment to hybrid or virtual for that date. Mundo Verde has plans to reopen on Feb 1.
If no other charters, or DCPS, do this, then I doubt they will follow through. [/quote
Predictably, LAMB announced yesterday it will no longer open for hybrid in late Jan./early Feb. No rescheduled date announced.
The school will just end up following what DPCS and/or other charters do.
And on that note, anyone know of any private schools taking children for the remainder of the year?
Anonymous wrote:LAMB has been making detailed plans to reopen late Jan or early Feb, including asking for commitment to hybrid or virtual for that date. Mundo Verde has plans to reopen on Feb 1.
If no other charters, or DCPS, do this, then I doubt they will follow through. [/quote
Predictably, LAMB announced yesterday it will no longer open for hybrid in late Jan./early Feb. No rescheduled date announced.
The school will just end up following what DPCS and/or other charters do.
Anonymous wrote:The public charter schools are proving that their claim that they are more flexible and nimble than regular public schools is absolutely false. They have failed to come up with plans for providing in-person learning because the staff simply does not want to provide in-person learning and their leadership supports them above everything else. They are not following the the science and the data even though they proclaim to be doing so. For reasons I do not understand, DC parents/guardians are complacent. I support public education 100%, but this has made me seriously waiver and I have lost a lot of respect for public school teachers and their leadership. The research is in: distance learning is no good so stop acting like it is a way to provide a quality education. It is crap. And stop acting like you care about the disadvantaged students because you don’t - if you did, the teachers would be double-masked and wearing face shields and the charter schools would be open. We are at a charter and it is one big disappointment. And before you all start making assumptions: we are African-American, with some health issues that worry us, but we would have our kids doing some hybrid program in a second if offered the opportunity because they are suffering academically and in terms of mental health. But according to the charters, my type of family does not want in-person learning. That is complete BS - I know that my brown kids who are already disadvantaged in this society will only be set back even further because of the schools’ failure to actually give a damn and follow the science.
Anonymous wrote:The public charter schools are proving that their claim that they are more flexible and nimble than regular public schools is absolutely false. They have failed to come up with plans for providing in-person learning because the staff simply does not want to provide in-person learning and their leadership supports them above everything else. They are not following the the science and the data even though they proclaim to be doing so. For reasons I do not understand, DC parents/guardians are complacent. I support public education 100%, but this has made me seriously waiver and I have lost a lot of respect for public school teachers and their leadership. The research is in: distance learning is no good so stop acting like it is a way to provide a quality education. It is crap. And stop acting like you care about the disadvantaged students because you don’t - if you did, the teachers would be double-masked and wearing face shields and the charter schools would be open. We are at a charter and it is one big disappointment. And before you all start making assumptions: we are African-American, with some health issues that worry us, but we would have our kids doing some hybrid program in a second if offered the opportunity because they are suffering academically and in terms of mental health. But according to the charters, my type of family does not want in-person learning. That is complete BS - I know that my brown kids who are already disadvantaged in this society will only be set back even further because of the schools’ failure to actually give a damn and follow the science.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For parents with kids in charters, how have they navigated the whole DL situation?
Do you know of any that has opened or is doing a hybrid model?
What has your experience been like at your charter during the pandemic?
Even if they haven't opened yet, have they been good at communicating with parents about their reopening plans? Any deadlines set?
If you can please name them, that will be valuable information for other parents as well.
Thanks!
CMI has been very good at communicating that leadership is in no rush to resume in person learning and they are prioritizing safety from covid over educational outcomes. They have quite convincingly argued that the majority of parents support this approach.
+100
Argued, or showed you that most parents support virtual as opposed to in person? We’re parents surveyed, and were those survey results shared?