Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.
That was before delta.
And quarantining an entire elementary school classroom is actually easier than just quarantining eight kids that were exposed that week. And then another six kids that are exposed in the next week. And then the teacher is exposed the following week… How our school districts planning on keeping all these kids up to speed, when a few of them are gone for 10 to 14 days at a time, multiple times all fall? Without virtual instruction?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.
Was it a full class last year? Did they eat crammed into the cafeteria? Was community spread high then? Was Delta around then? Things have changed since the spring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talking is overrated. All teachers need to shut up about how to deal with stuff, and actually DEAL with stuff!
Maybe we are tired of being the solution to all of society's problems. Maybe we want everyone to know how it really is in schools. We have dealt with our inept school districts for our entire careers. Now you get to see what we have to put up with.
Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.
Anonymous wrote:Someone's experience is different from yours and they are a troll?
NP and we've made seating arrangements to facilitate contact tracing, but there has been no conversation about what will happen if/when students are out for a long time or classes get pushed virtual. We luckily have lots of mitigation strategies in place (mandated masking and distancing). But it feels like "well, let's see what happens with Delta because all this worked well last year."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talking is overrated. All teachers need to shut up about how to deal with stuff, and actually DEAL with stuff!
Ah, you sound lovely. No wonder your kids are desperate to get to school.
Anonymous wrote:Talking is overrated. All teachers need to shut up about how to deal with stuff, and actually DEAL with stuff!
Anonymous wrote:Talking is overrated. All teachers need to shut up about how to deal with stuff, and actually DEAL with stuff!
Anonymous wrote:Someone's experience is different from yours and they are a troll?
NP and we've made seating arrangements to facilitate contact tracing, but there has been no conversation about what will happen if/when students are out for a long time or classes get pushed virtual. We luckily have lots of mitigation strategies in place (mandated masking and distancing). But it feels like "well, let's see what happens with Delta because all this worked well last year."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.
Was it a full class last year? Did they eat crammed into the cafeteria? Was community spread high then? Was Delta around then? Things have changed since the spring.
Yes, it was the same size class as this year 22 kids in one, 24 in the other. Actually, community number in fairfax right now are the same as they were in April. They did not eat crammed in the cafeteria and they are not eating crammed in the cafeteria this year either in our elementary. I'm sure there will be cases and exposures, but I'm still not worried about rampant spread. Plus, they've been through so many scenarios that they have a lot to fall back on. If an elementary school class has to go virtual for 2 weeks, then they will. They know how to do it.
I'm ready for anything and know this could go a lot of different ways, but I don't understand the panic. Almost 80% of adults in FFX are vaccinated and 77% of 12-18 year olds have had at least their first dose. That's a pretty hard stopping line for spread and also will keep the vast majority of people out of the hospitals in our area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.
Was it a full class last year? Did they eat crammed into the cafeteria? Was community spread high then? Was Delta around then? Things have changed since the spring.
Anonymous wrote:Talking is overrated. All teachers need to shut up about how to deal with stuff, and actually DEAL with stuff!
Anonymous wrote:Schools have been operating in person all around the country for quite some time now. My kids went back in person in FCPS elementary for 4th quarter last school year. They did not have a single case of covid. I think it's going to be fine. And I think they will roll with whatever happens. I know in FCPS, the health department is responsible for handling contact tracing and determining quarantine. Anecdotally, they seem to rarely to quarantining a whole classroom. I just don't think it's going to be that difficult to figure things out as they come.