Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Five days a week or we riot in the streets .
Will you just STFU? Damn.
Anonymous wrote:Why does someone ask this same question every few days???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The next battle will be around the online option. Staffing and what courses to offer. There absolutely will be an online option as long as there isn’t a pediatric vaccine, and if the pediatric vaccine takes a very long time, there could be an online option indefinitely if people get used to it and like it. Virtual Virginia won’t be the online option because FCPS doesn’t get funding for those students and they don’t want to give up $$. If FCPS decides to do the DL classes at each school like they are now, get ready for another school year of concurrent, even hybrid concurrent. Because they don’t have the staffing to run two school systems. If they can create a county-wide online campus, that could work and we could be free of the “going to school to watch teacher on a computer” nonsense, BUT they may be reluctant to do that because the online kids liked wouldn’t get the same course offerings as the in person kids.
The fact that they won’t relax the 6 feet rule is also a problem that could lead to hybrid next school year as well. Seems like they want no Covid at all before they relax the distancing requirements.
These are the biggest issues I can see.
The other would be if they fall back to using CDC's "community spread" guidelines over VDOE's "spread in school matrixed with community spread" guidelines. If they do that, then who knows when hybrid would end? The community spread guidelines from CDC to be full-time in-person are absurdly low.
In Brabrand's most recent family town hall he mentioned using an "equity" lens around online campuses, which in my read means another year of concurrent learning because they won't get creative to figure out how to do anything else (and they'll already have the concurrent technology plus have a lot more funding coming in from Biden's new stimulus).
Anonymous wrote:It will be hybrid until the fall of 2022.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m debating if I should go parochial school or not. I know it hasn’t been a bad experience for all kids but virtual has been a big problem for mine. I legitimately panic at the thought there could be any days of virtual next year.
Next year I will have a kindergartener, a first grader who at best will have had 26 days in the classroom since spring of kindergarten, and a fourth grader. I panic too.
That should say second grader, not first grader.
Anonymous wrote:It will be hybrid.
Anonymous wrote:Five days a week or we riot in the streets .
Anonymous wrote:The next battle will be around the online option. Staffing and what courses to offer. There absolutely will be an online option as long as there isn’t a pediatric vaccine, and if the pediatric vaccine takes a very long time, there could be an online option indefinitely if people get used to it and like it. Virtual Virginia won’t be the online option because FCPS doesn’t get funding for those students and they don’t want to give up $$. If FCPS decides to do the DL classes at each school like they are now, get ready for another school year of concurrent, even hybrid concurrent. Because they don’t have the staffing to run two school systems. If they can create a county-wide online campus, that could work and we could be free of the “going to school to watch teacher on a computer” nonsense, BUT they may be reluctant to do that because the online kids liked wouldn’t get the same course offerings as the in person kids.
The fact that they won’t relax the 6 feet rule is also a problem that could lead to hybrid next school year as well. Seems like they want no Covid at all before they relax the distancing requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Why does someone ask this same question every few days???[/quote
Because people are scared after seeing their kids suffer this year.
Because people are afraid their kids who no longer love school might not get that love back.
Because people recognize that teaching is a professional occupation and that most parents are not skilled enough to do it, and yes virtual requires significant parental teaching for younger children.
Because acceptance decisions about private and parochial schools need to be made very soon and FCPS families who never considered going outside public have some hard decisions to make.