Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.
Right, but as OP mentioned, this time you should be able to know who is likely vaccinated and who is not, based on whether they are wearing a mask. If you know or strongly suspect a student is not vaccinated, are you going to request that information? Are you going to enforce the mask policy on that student?
In my classroom everyone will wear a mask so, yes, I will enforce a mask policy. DP.
What if the school doesn’t require it? You quit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so jealous of the private schools in MD that will require vaccines for all 12+ attendees (unless they have a medical exemption) and will mask and outdoor lunch all students under 12.
Me too. I'm listening to some private school friends tell me how mitigated their schools will be next year. Vaccine mandates, outdoor lunch, and still masking in schools if you're under 12. I heard that Maryland doesn't even have a religious exemption in schools if there is an active endemic in the community.
It seems that everyone can have safety but us. APS can do better, it just chooses not to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.
Right, but as OP mentioned, this time you should be able to know who is likely vaccinated and who is not, based on whether they are wearing a mask. If you know or strongly suspect a student is not vaccinated, are you going to request that information? Are you going to enforce the mask policy on that student?
In my classroom everyone will wear a mask so, yes, I will enforce a mask policy. DP.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so jealous of the private schools in MD that will require vaccines for all 12+ attendees (unless they have a medical exemption) and will mask and outdoor lunch all students under 12.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they allowed? Yes
Will teachers be cross referencing and checking vaccination status to be mask police? No
As a teacher, I don’t have time for that and certainly won’t memorize the vaccination status for my 130+ high school students.
Speak for yourself. I absolutely WILL be checking vaccination status AND I absolutely WILL require unvaccinated students to wear masks.
Anonymous wrote:
Link to similar discussion on the DCPS forum:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/988551.page
Personally, I am for public schools requiring proof of vaccination, even if a lawsuit will certainly ensue. A federal judge recently ruled in favor of (public) Indiana University's right to require proof of vaccination.
Sadly it seems that area public schools don't have the guts to try, in this region chock-full of lawyers. They might change their minds if the CDC starts warning about a dangerous Delta spread, and state or county governments start ringing alarm bells on hospitalizations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.
Right, but as OP mentioned, this time you should be able to know who is likely vaccinated and who is not, based on whether they are wearing a mask. If you know or strongly suspect a student is not vaccinated, are you going to request that information? Are you going to enforce the mask policy on that student?
Anonymous wrote:
I’m the teacher that responded and you didn’t acknowledge that I said we would not be checking. I don’t have inside knowledge but I bet it’s on the honor system or they will require everyone to mask. No one will care if your kid masks or treats them differently. No one will assume their vaccination status. There are vaccinated individuals all over in public in masks. And there are also unvaccinated individuals without. We don’t know anyone’s vaccination status when we are in the grocery store.
Anonymous wrote:No need to because they will all be wearing masks. CDC added some guidance that says if the whole class is masked, there is no quarnatine time needed if a positive in the class. So schools are going to require masking to eliminate quarantine/disruption.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. They are allowed to require proof of any vaccination.
Schools don't share this information with teachers. I have no idea which of my students have medical or religious exemptions or medical conditions that prevent them from responding to a vaccine, unless the parent tells me directly.
Right now, covid vaccines are not on the list of required vaccines. I imagine a change would require a change in law, which is of course doable. But an individual public school couldn't go rogue and require it.