Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
This is the stupidest . One sneeze and the whole section is gone. Maybe that’s the plan.
If they’re all in the room together for an extended period of time, it’s not going to matter whether the sneeze came from a kid sitting across from them or behind them. May as well do the arrangement most conducive to learning.
This last part is true. It’s very hard for kids to social distance. It’s not natural.
Elementary schools will be much better off if they truly had a layered mitigation plan including weekly required testing, cohorts, HEPA filters, cracked windows, outdoor lunch, required vaccinations of all adults who work in the building and masking. I know the cdc recommendation has changed, but if there’s any positive case in an elementary classroom all students should quarantine. Impossible for teachers to know if masks always worn correctly and who was near whom.
This is my fear. In two weeks out two weeks. In three weeks out two weeks. No concurrent virtual instruction. Just busy work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
This is the stupidest . One sneeze and the whole section is gone. Maybe that’s the plan.
If they’re all in the room together for an extended period of time, it’s not going to matter whether the sneeze came from a kid sitting across from them or behind them. May as well do the arrangement most conducive to learning.
This last part is true. It’s very hard for kids to social distance. It’s not natural.
Elementary schools will be much better off if they truly had a layered mitigation plan including weekly required testing, cohorts, HEPA filters, cracked windows, outdoor lunch, required vaccinations of all adults who work in the building and masking. I know the cdc recommendation has changed, but if there’s any positive case in an elementary classroom all students should quarantine. Impossible for teachers to know if masks always worn correctly and who was near whom.
Anonymous wrote:Schools were closed for a year and then hybrid because there wasn’t enough room to distance in the classroom. How did someone not know this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:APS has been saying this since before school was let out. As usual people who pay little to no attention come here to complain at the last minute.
The desks don’t need to be pushed together . Fairfax has desks staggered.
** **
** **
Vs
* *
* *
* *
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
This is the stupidest . One sneeze and the whole section is gone. Maybe that’s the plan.
If they’re all in the room together for an extended period of time, it’s not going to matter whether the sneeze came from a kid sitting across from them or behind them. May as well do the arrangement most conducive to learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
This is the stupidest . One sneeze and the whole section is gone. Maybe that’s the plan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:APS has been saying this since before school was let out. As usual people who pay little to no attention come here to complain at the last minute.
Yes. This was announced months ago. They even extended the window to pick the virtual program in case it made people change their minds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, superintendents really set us up by telling parents there would be distancing in classrooms whenever possible, knowing full well it’s not possible with full classes and no or very few virtual students. -teacher.
Duran needs to be fired.
I'm an APS teacher/parent and I think he is doing a decent job. We are doing some things differently this year to allow for greater distancing (play spaces, lunch) It's not always possible, the seating is a challenge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
I saw the same thing at hamm this morning. Kids sitting four to a table facing each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no social distancing in our elementary class room. 4 desks to a pod side by side. WTH
Same with kids facing each other with desks touching. Trying to get some better masks.
You were at ASFS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, superintendents really set us up by telling parents there would be distancing in classrooms whenever possible, knowing full well it’s not possible with full classes and no or very few virtual students. -teacher.
Duran needs to be fired.
Anonymous wrote:APS has been saying this since before school was let out. As usual people who pay little to no attention come here to complain at the last minute.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, superintendents really set us up by telling parents there would be distancing in classrooms whenever possible, knowing full well it’s not possible with full classes and no or very few virtual students. -teacher.