Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are low-wage workers who are desperate enough for work they will stand in harms way so vaccinated teachers can stay home.
Are monitors not eligible for vaccinations as FCPS employees?
Yes. PP was just another troll with Teacher Derangement Syndrome.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, classroom monitors will monitor a room full of students who have a virtual teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are low-wage workers who are desperate enough for work they will stand in harms way so vaccinated teachers can stay home.
Are monitors not eligible for vaccinations as FCPS employees?
Yes. PP was just another troll with Teacher Derangement Syndrome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers who have an ADA accommodation to teach from home but have students in person.
ADA is for reasonable accommodations. How is it reasonable to make some kids sit in front of a computer all day in school compared to having an in person teacher. If my child is with a teacher who is at home and has a classroom monitor I am going to rethink sending them
At all.
I agree but think it will be mostly used for secondary. So a kid would likely only have this for a subject or two.
Look at boas Docs. The number of monitors needed is evenly split between K-6 and 7-12. Over 400 K-6 classes will have a virtual teacher and monitor.
*Board Docs. I’m glad I’m not a K-6 parent. I agree. My HS kid can sit in a classroom and continue to learn Latin virtually I pdf needs be. 4 of her teachers are already teaching out of the building. Orchestra teacher got in the first minute possible. Heard to be in a small house with your own kids DL— while teaching cello.
But K-3 is all or nothing. All day 1st grade remote. Remote Latin may be reasonable for my junior. Remote 1st grade. The kids who draw the short straw are screwed. It is not a reasonable accommodation for littles.
Little ones who are in person aren't the ones getting accommodations under ADA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are low-wage workers who are desperate enough for work they will stand in harms way so vaccinated teachers can stay home.
Are monitors not eligible for vaccinations as FCPS employees?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers who have an ADA accommodation to teach from home but have students in person.
ADA is for reasonable accommodations. How is it reasonable to make some kids sit in front of a computer all day in school compared to having an in person teacher. If my child is with a teacher who is at home and has a classroom monitor I am going to rethink sending them
At all.
I agree but think it will be mostly used for secondary. So a kid would likely only have this for a subject or two.
Look at boas Docs. The number of monitors needed is evenly split between K-6 and 7-12. Over 400 K-6 classes will have a virtual teacher and monitor.
*Board Docs. I’m glad I’m not a K-6 parent. I agree. My HS kid can sit in a classroom and continue to learn Latin virtually I pdf needs be. 4 of her teachers are already teaching out of the building. Orchestra teacher got in the first minute possible. Heard to be in a small house with your own kids DL— while teaching cello.
But K-3 is all or nothing. All day 1st grade remote. Remote Latin may be reasonable for my junior. Remote 1st grade. The kids who draw the short straw are screwed. It is not a reasonable accommodation for littles.
Little ones who are in person aren't the ones getting accommodations under ADA.
Anonymous wrote:They are low-wage workers who are desperate enough for work they will stand in harms way so vaccinated teachers can stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers who have an ADA accommodation to teach from home but have students in person.
ADA is for reasonable accommodations. How is it reasonable to make some kids sit in front of a computer all day in school compared to having an in person teacher. If my child is with a teacher who is at home and has a classroom monitor I am going to rethink sending them
At all.
I agree but think it will be mostly used for secondary. So a kid would likely only have this for a subject or two.
Look at boas Docs. The number of monitors needed is evenly split between K-6 and 7-12. Over 400 K-6 classes will have a virtual teacher and monitor.
*Board Docs. I’m glad I’m not a K-6 parent. I agree. My HS kid can sit in a classroom and continue to learn Latin virtually I pdf needs be. 4 of her teachers are already teaching out of the building. Orchestra teacher got in the first minute possible. Heard to be in a small house with your own kids DL— while teaching cello.
But K-3 is all or nothing. All day 1st grade remote. Remote Latin may be reasonable for my junior. Remote 1st grade. The kids who draw the short straw are screwed. It is not a reasonable accommodation for littles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are lots of reasons why a teacher might be unavailable.
First, there will be situations where teachers are exposed when students aren't. I teach in person. We had a situation where a teacher and her husband spent time with someone, who was diagnosed the day after she saw him. Since the time period between the teacher seeing the person, and seeing students, was so short, the Health Department found there was no risk. So, the teacher was ordered to quarantine but not the class. Then during the teacher's two week quarantine her husband got the virus so the two weeks started again. Then their kid got it, so the two weeks started again. The teacher never got it but she was teaching from home 5 weeks I think?
There are also situations where teachers aren't interchangeable. At my school, there's on teacher who can teach the AP and post AP calc classes. They can't just switch her with one of the Algebra 1 teachers. There's one teacher who can teach a couple of the languages. Or there will be situations where things are uneven. So, there's 3 third grade teachers and they all have ADA protection, and none of the 2nd grade teachers do.
Or the teacher is not local and they are placing a monitor while she teaches from a distance.
True story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers who have an ADA accommodation to teach from home but have students in person.
ADA is for reasonable accommodations. How is it reasonable to make some kids sit in front of a computer all day in school compared to having an in person teacher. If my child is with a teacher who is at home and has a classroom monitor I am going to rethink sending them
At all.
I agree but think it will be mostly used for secondary. So a kid would likely only have this for a subject or two.
Look at boas Docs. The number of monitors needed is evenly split between K-6 and 7-12. Over 400 K-6 classes will have a virtual teacher and monitor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers who have an ADA accommodation to teach from home but have students in person.
ADA is for reasonable accommodations. How is it reasonable to make some kids sit in front of a computer all day in school compared to having an in person teacher. If my child is with a teacher who is at home and has a classroom monitor I am going to rethink sending them
At all.
I agree but think it will be mostly used for secondary. So a kid would likely only have this for a subject or two.
Anonymous wrote:There are lots of reasons why a teacher might be unavailable.
First, there will be situations where teachers are exposed when students aren't. I teach in person. We had a situation where a teacher and her husband spent time with someone, who was diagnosed the day after she saw him. Since the time period between the teacher seeing the person, and seeing students, was so short, the Health Department found there was no risk. So, the teacher was ordered to quarantine but not the class. Then during the teacher's two week quarantine her husband got the virus so the two weeks started again. Then their kid got it, so the two weeks started again. The teacher never got it but she was teaching from home 5 weeks I think?
There are also situations where teachers aren't interchangeable. At my school, there's on teacher who can teach the AP and post AP calc classes. They can't just switch her with one of the Algebra 1 teachers. There's one teacher who can teach a couple of the languages. Or there will be situations where things are uneven. So, there's 3 third grade teachers and they all have ADA protection, and none of the 2nd grade teachers do.