Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I absolutely feel bad for the school administrators having to do the "hygiene theater" with deep cleaning and trying to enforce social distancing during outdoor play. They'll twist themselves in knots complying with the DC Health guidelines, then the kids will leave school and head right to crowded playgrounds and activities. It's silly, but it's not the school's fault, so we can just hope the CDC relaxes the guidelines over the summer.
Ugh, same here. DC Health is acting like it's still early 2020 when we thought that hand-washing and lysol wipes were the most important.
As others have said, the cohorts are more for contact tracing (and preventing a full-scale shutdown) than safety ... but even then, it doesn't make sense because kids have siblings, they have friends in other classes, they go to playgrounds. If we were in a full-on lockdown and strict cohorting was how we kept schools open, then great. But again, that hasn't been the case since last spring. When you take away full-time school, people just come up with ad hoc education & childcare solutions that have no safety measures OR that rely on older, at-risk relatives.
It's better, in my opinion, to do a few safety measures REALLY well than do a dozen for show. One of my kids has been in in-person pre-school for months and they don't enforce distancing with this age group because there's no point. But they're great with masks, they are outside constantly, and they made sure adults got vaccinated ASAP. They've had zero cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I absolutely feel bad for the school administrators having to do the "hygiene theater" with deep cleaning and trying to enforce social distancing during outdoor play. They'll twist themselves in knots complying with the DC Health guidelines, then the kids will leave school and head right to crowded playgrounds and activities. It's silly, but it's not the school's fault, so we can just hope the CDC relaxes the guidelines over the summer.
Ugh, same here. DC Health is acting like it's still early 2020 when we thought that hand-washing and lysol wipes were the most important.
As others have said, the cohorts are more for contact tracing (and preventing a full-scale shutdown) than safety ... but even then, it doesn't make sense because kids have siblings, they have friends in other classes, they go to playgrounds. If we were in a full-on lockdown and strict cohorting was how we kept schools open, then great. But again, that hasn't been the case since last spring. When you take away full-time school, people just come up with ad hoc education & childcare solutions that have no safety measures OR that rely on older, at-risk relatives.
It's better, in my opinion, to do a few safety measures REALLY well than do a dozen for show. One of my kids has been in in-person pre-school for months and they don't enforce distancing with this age group because there's no point. But they're great with masks, they are outside constantly, and they made sure adults got vaccinated ASAP. They've had zero cases.
Anonymous wrote:Keeping your kid safer isn't actually the reason for cohorts. I think the cohort thing is really more about contact tracing. It makes it easier and you only have to keep one cohort out for a positive, not everyone.
Anonymous wrote:
I absolutely feel bad for the school administrators having to do the "hygiene theater" with deep cleaning and trying to enforce social distancing during outdoor play. They'll twist themselves in knots complying with the DC Health guidelines, then the kids will leave school and head right to crowded playgrounds and activities. It's silly, but it's not the school's fault, so we can just hope the CDC relaxes the guidelines over the summer.