Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I’ve also been told that if in person will result in 40+ class size For DL, then that grade won’t have in person
It's not 40+
I believe the cap for 3-5 is 40 students
K-2 is 35
PK is 30
Is this documented somewhere?
So it may be 40 or 39 instead of 42. People think this is a good idea? My kid barely gets the attention he needs right now, and we are going to add 15 more kids into the mix?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
Do you sense that this is a plan that Murch put into place itself? They know their student body the best and I'm sure the principal knows there will be hundreds of angry parents if their children are forced to remain in DL AND face losing a their teacher after two months of relationship and trust building. So my guess is the principal is gambling that in-person will fair anyway so better to keep the majority DL families happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I’ve also been told that if in person will result in 40+ class size For DL, then that grade won’t have in person
It's not 40+
I believe the cap for 3-5 is 40 students
K-2 is 35
PK is 30
Is this documented somewhere?
So it may be 40 or 39 instead of 42. People think this is a good idea? My kid barely gets the attention he needs right now, and we are going to add 15 more kids into the mix?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I’ve also been told that if in person will result in 40+ class size For DL, then that grade won’t have in person
It's not 40+
I believe the cap for 3-5 is 40 students
K-2 is 35
PK is 30
Is this documented somewhere?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
How is the teacher supposed to pull this off. Why do we expect our teachers to do the impossible?
so if an IEP for in person for a self contained classroom has a minimum of 20 hours of specialized instruction, how can it be implemented with fidelity if for 1/2 the day the teacher delivering instruction to students who are all remote?
My child has been in a SLS virtual learning environment and there are lots of prompting for engagement.
Thank you Chancellor Ferebee for continuing to provide the children with the greatest needs a program that does not support their learning needs.
Children in general education who are doing DL have a dedicated teacher.
Children in self-contained classrooms who are doing DL have a part time teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
How is the teacher supposed to pull this off. Why do we expect our teachers to do the impossible?
Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I’ve also been told that if in person will result in 40+ class size For DL, then that grade won’t have in person
It's not 40+
I believe the cap for 3-5 is 40 students
K-2 is 35
PK is 30
Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.
That seems ideal...but impossible. I suspect it will be nearly impossible for a group 11 of high needs kids to work independently without help long enough for a teacher to teach online.
Anonymous wrote:If I'm reading the email we got from Murch correctly, the in-person teacher will continue to teach DL, during the periods when the in-person kids are working independently, and the DL kids will do their asynchronous learning while the in-person kids get their live instruction. They are adjusting the schedule for everyone to figure this out. It sounds exhausting to me, but they seem to be trying to minimize the disruption to the kids of changing classes.