Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Rhode Island kept schools open the entire time without problems.
Not without problems, though.
:For school districts opening for the first time, Rhode Island’s experience also offers an example of what to expect — and to try to mitigate against — under very difficult circumstances: severely stressed educators, possibly chaotic classrooms, unpredictability for students, high rates of quarantine and absenteeism, lost services for students with special needs. It wasn’t easy; it wasn’t pretty; and at times, it did not even feel like school.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/10/magazine/school-reopenings-rhode-island.html
It remains to be seen whether keeping schools open in Rhode Island through all this chaos was the best thing for students, educationally.
Anonymous wrote:Nice try OP. The vast majority want our kids back in school and will jump at any opportunity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just like we need to educate people that the vaccine is safe and effective, we need to educate parents that it is safe for their children to be in school.
Sure, as soon as I can get this safe and effective vaccine for my family, I’ll be ready to send my kids back to the safe school.
Anonymous wrote:
Rhode Island kept schools open the entire time without problems.
:For school districts opening for the first time, Rhode Island’s experience also offers an example of what to expect — and to try to mitigate against — under very difficult circumstances: severely stressed educators, possibly chaotic classrooms, unpredictability for students, high rates of quarantine and absenteeism, lost services for students with special needs. It wasn’t easy; it wasn’t pretty; and at times, it did not even feel like school.
Anonymous wrote:Just like we need to educate people that the vaccine is safe and effective, we need to educate parents that it is safe for their children to be in school.
I agree with this somewhat as a FCPS parent. Honestly, when you consider spring break and the two weeks of online learning post spring break, I really don't see much value in going back for the 15-18 sessions ...and with testing NNAT and SOLs, I don't even think this is going to happen.
I would be MUCH happier if a plan for 5 days a week was set for the fall, though.
IMO as an MCPS parent, if you want five days in the fall, we need to get back in some sloppy form this spring. If we don't, there's going to be even more hand-flapping, excuse-making, and general "we don't know hooooowwww" because we will have not been in school buildings for 18 months.
My kids are in a learning hub right now, so it's likely that the return this spring will make our lives more challenging for the remainder of the school year, even while it will hopefully be better for our kids. I'll take that trade-off if it increases the likelihood of kids being back five days a week, to something that resembles actual in-person instruction.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with this somewhat as a FCPS parent. Honestly, when you consider spring break and the two weeks of online learning post spring break, I really don't see much value in going back for the 15-18 sessions ...and with testing NNAT and SOLs, I don't even think this is going to happen.
I would be MUCH happier if a plan for 5 days a week was set for the fall, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Using 2 large urban districts as an example doesn’t really describe the feelings of all parents universally.
+1
I think if you surveyed the landscape of the entire country, most parents want kids back in school and many already have them in school.
This isn’t true. What you think is just fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of my kids was doing in person K (at a private school). Her teacher tested positive for covid. Then kids had to stay home for two weeks. It has been pandemonium. Parents are quarantining. Some tested positive at least 5 classmates positive not sure if it's from the teacher. Everyone is upset. If I could go back and do it again, I would not do this. The stress and disruption are far worse than having kept her home.
Speaking as someone with two kids who will have had no in-person school for 12 months, this is not true. Stress, disruption, and pandemonium would be better than that.
Anonymous wrote:
Well, DUH.
Only a raucus and irrational minority is pinning the blame on teachers' unions. A lot of us know full well that we don't want our kids back in school in the middle of uncontrolled viral spread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Using 2 large urban districts as an example doesn’t really describe the feelings of all parents universally.
+1
I think if you surveyed the landscape of the entire country, most parents want kids back in school and many already have them in school.