Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are schools allowed to ignore the guidance? Is it definitely binding?
I think yes. I mean schools all over the country are open - not just TX and FL - (NY, MA, Chicago (IL). Mayor Bowser is either too afraid to do what is right for kids or too stupid and only seems focused on opening businesses (also important but not at the expense of kids).
The issue is the city's health guidance, not CDC's. The city is capping the number of kids in class at 11, and that limit needs to go. I wonder if schools can just ignore it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are schools allowed to ignore the guidance? Is it definitely binding?
I think yes. I mean schools all over the country are open - not just TX and FL - (NY, MA, Chicago (IL). Mayor Bowser is either too afraid to do what is right for kids or too stupid and only seems focused on opening businesses (also important but not at the expense of kids).
Anonymous wrote:Are schools allowed to ignore the guidance? Is it definitely binding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good news that charters are being proactive about advocating to change the guidelines.
It’s needed and long overdue now that the vaccines are out and everyone will have access to it soon.
Maybe for next school year, if that's what you mean by soon
hey, if the charters open full-time next year and DCPS doesn't, I will laugh my ass off.
I would not bet on that. If DCPS doesn't open....the charters won't open. They have proven throughout this entire year that they are not innovators but followers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good news that charters are being proactive about advocating to change the guidelines.
It’s needed and long overdue now that the vaccines are out and everyone will have access to it soon.
Maybe for next school year, if that's what you mean by soon
hey, if the charters open full-time next year and DCPS doesn't, I will laugh my ass off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good news that charters are being proactive about advocating to change the guidelines.
It’s needed and long overdue now that the vaccines are out and everyone will have access to it soon.
Maybe for next school year, if that's what you mean by soon
hey, if the charters open full-time next year and DCPS doesn't, I will laugh my ass off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good news that charters are being proactive about advocating to change the guidelines.
It’s needed and long overdue now that the vaccines are out and everyone will have access to it soon.
Maybe for next school year, if that's what you mean by soon
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30 kids in a classroom? 😳
Dozens of midwest school have 25-35 kids in a classroom. Some with masks some lower grade without masks. They have had some quarantine days but for the most part it has been going fine. Of course they are mainly in schools with windows that open and larger classroom sizes. Many of the towns are doing minimal testing but, are also further behind the vaccine rollout as well.
Point being it can be done reasonably safely even if it makes us uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:30 kids in a classroom? 😳