Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
Ok. But I know my fourth grader isn’t interacting with pre-K/k kids during the day. I don’t need notifications if it’s in their classes
Anonymous wrote:I would like to know if it's in my kid's grade. Any chance they will do that?
Anonymous wrote:I would like to know if it's in my kid's grade. Any chance they will do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
That is an old metric. You can get Delta several feet further away, and it can be in seconds not minutes. Just keep that in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
Ok. But I know my fourth grader isn’t interacting with pre-K/k kids during the day. I don’t need notifications if it’s in their classes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Between kids moving around throughout the day, lunch, and the bus (if applicable), I think any given classroom is potentially a "danger zone" for kids whenever someone in that classroom has a positive case. It's not like the teachers have Lojack systems on these kids so they know with absolute certainty who was and who wasn't within 3 feet for at least 15 minutes throughout the day. It's prudent to notify the affected classrooms so parents can make appropriate decisions for their families, including testing and quarantining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
I think they create unnecessary panic. I only want to know if my kid was in the danger zone
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
We will become desensitized to these notices, which is why a schoolwide notice is of limited utility. The notices really should be by classroom.
Anonymous wrote:ATS families got an email this afternoon about “one or more students” having covid. I guess this is par for the course this school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ATS and Tuckahoe. It’s available for everyone to see.
https://apsva.co1.qualtrics.com/public-dashboard/v0/dashboard/60d5f170495a0000108b9941#/dashboard/60d5f170495a0000108b9941?pageId=Page_749e04aa-9c5e-44dc-b924-af5889aaacb9
This isn't even accurate. Cardinal sent out an email this morning saying there were two cases at school, this only shows 1.