Anonymous wrote:Everyone so quick to blame Karen and Becky.
You do realize that there are some parents who do not earn sick/vacation leave, and if they do not work, they do not get paid. And not getting paid that day or two might mean the difference in paying the rent or not, in buying medication for a family member or not, or putting meals on the table or not.
According to Mana Food Center (Montgomery County, https://www.mannafood.org/about/), there are 63,000 county residents who experience hunger and food insecurity. From the link: "Our county is one of the most affluent in the country, yet one in three public school students receives free and discounted school lunches..."
Even the schools with less than 5% FARMS have some students on FARMS. Not everyone lives the charmed life some of you seem to.
Fine, the parents who have to choose between staying home with a sick kid and letting a sick relative die for lack of medicine get a pass. For the other 99% of the population, take care of your frickin kids!!Anonymous wrote:Everyone so quick to blame Karen and Becky.
You do realize that there are some parents who do not earn sick/vacation leave, and if they do not work, they do not get paid. And not getting paid that day or two might mean the difference in paying the rent or not, in buying medication for a family member or not, or putting meals on the table or not.
According to Mana Food Center (Montgomery County, https://www.mannafood.org/about/), there are 63,000 county residents who experience hunger and food insecurity. From the link: "Our county is one of the most affluent in the country, yet one in three public school students receives free and discounted school lunches..."
Even the schools with less than 5% FARMS have some students on FARMS. Not everyone lives the charmed life some of you seem to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I'm coming down with a cold. Trying to figure out if I should take my 8AM flight tomorrow...
Wear a mask
x100000
The worst is the parents who bought tickets to Disney, refuse to reschedule, and get the whole plane sick, plus the next plane full of people, with all the germs. So freaking selfish. Masks are 50 cents each. Buy them for you and your petri dish family -- and spare everyone else the unsuspected and unexpected grief of spending their only vacation in ten years, in bed. How gross can you be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
How often does this happen? You’re dramatic so I’m assuming never. And I SAH and my kid missed days of this semester because I keep her home when sick!
It happens multiple times per year in my experience (Pk-2nd grade)
You are saying that multiple times per year there are different parents who dose their kids with motrin and then do not answer their phones for hours on end during the day? I have a really hard time believing it. Sorry.
But if they had Motrin and are fine, Whats the need for the parents to pick them up. They are fine. You are depriving Them of learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
How often does this happen? You’re dramatic so I’m assuming never. And I SAH and my kid missed days of this semester because I keep her home when sick!
It happens multiple times per year in my experience (Pk-2nd grade)
You are saying that multiple times per year there are different parents who dose their kids with motrin and then do not answer their phones for hours on end during the day? I have a really hard time believing it. Sorry.
1-2 parents every year, multiple occurrences
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I'm coming down with a cold. Trying to figure out if I should take my 8AM flight tomorrow...
Wear a mask
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it’s been my experience that they sometimes have to close schools during flu seasons. Judging just by the number of posts here on people getting sick and having to change plans for Christmas, it’s prevalent.Anonymous wrote:so it's not been my experience that contagions are constantly sweeping the school. (Which is what you'd think from the hand-wringing on this thread.)
My kid woke up with a fever this morning. Thanks to the ahole parent of the kid she caught it from. I can take her shopping, see a movie a restaurant, an indoor playground. But I’m not going to. I’m not an ahole.
You can avoid getting sick at the holidays by staying home from December 10-20. Do not allow anyone into your home. Live as though there's a plague out there. This is the the ONLY way to avoid germs. ALSO, if you're a truly responsible parent, you'd keep your child home during the contagious period BEFORE she shows symptoms. And if she vomits or has diarrhea, keep her home for the full 2 weeks after recovery so as not to contaminate any other kids.
More or less I think this is a good plan. It is why you have to keep kids home for colds- you don’t always know if it will become strep and by then it is too late, the germs have been spread all over. Very contagious early on, and young kids can’t always articulate it is their throat that hurts.
Anonymous wrote:I think I'm coming down with a cold. Trying to figure out if I should take my 8AM flight tomorrow...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
How often does this happen? You’re dramatic so I’m assuming never. And I SAH and my kid missed days of this semester because I keep her home when sick!
It happens multiple times per year in my experience (Pk-2nd grade)
You are saying that multiple times per year there are different parents who dose their kids with motrin and then do not answer their phones for hours on end during the day? I have a really hard time believing it. Sorry.
But if they had Motrin and are fine, Whats the need for the parents to pick them up. They are fine. You are depriving Them of learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.
+1. We know and we despise you. We can tell when you’ve dosed your poor kid with Motrin at 7am to hide that fever. It inevitably spikes at about lunchtime. We try to call. Leave a voicemail. You finally call back 30 minutes before school ends apologizing. You were in a meeting and, of course had no idea your child was sick. We know who you are. And we think you are a shitty parent.
How often does this happen? You’re dramatic so I’m assuming never. And I SAH and my kid missed days of this semester because I keep her home when sick!
It happens multiple times per year in my experience (Pk-2nd grade)
Anonymous wrote:Everyone who works at a school learns quickly who the shitty parents are. After about the third time, no one believes you when you say your kid was fine this morning or that you didn’t give them any meds before you put them on the bus. And yes, the lice parents are the worst.