Anonymous wrote:Such an ignorant comment. You know very little about education, and if you say you do, then what you know is garbage. Students are getting an education via distance learning. Thanks to technology and resourceful teachers children are being educated. You will lose that argument every time. Schools might even open in the spring as soon as vaccines are rolled out and people stop gathering 'safely'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved for this year. But I can’t stay away for another year. Solo-parenting our kids has been very stressful as my spouse went back in person in June and I work full-time too, which I don’t think I could have managed on my own without school for a full school year. March- August were difficult enough without much help, my spouse was only remote April-June. Our kids miss their dad, I miss him as well, and living as quasi-nomads is trying, at best. But the children are happy, have been in school since late August, and we’ve only had two potential exposures since we started. One class shut for a week, the other, in a separate incident, for 3 days. There has been no community spread in the school.
For the curious-
No routine testing
Class size is max of 12
Children and teacher are masked all day inside (this is elementary school and I have a K student who remembers no different than wearing the mask at school; so age has not been an issue in remaining properly masked)
Classrooms were retrofitted with a bathroom so children never leave the classroom to go into common areas
They eat at their desks which are spaced 6 feet apart
Each classroom has an outdoor entrance so children don’t mingle between grades
Playground equipment is wiped down between class usage and each grade has a separate recess block
With no testing, you cannot know spread. Sounds terrible to take the kids from their dad.
Well, since no other children or staff have gotten sick after the potential exposure and subsequent quarantine period, I’m not entirely sure what you mean? By community, I’m referring to within the school. The Department of Health does contact tracing upon an exposure and issues instructions to those deemed “close contacts.”
My husband has come to see us or we’ve seen him at least a week a month and we are doing the best we can. We’ve been tested regularly for COVID in order to comply with travel restrictions between DC and our temporary home state. He works long hours and often weekends on a regular basis so all of the associated time, effort, and childcare for virtual school were on me. It’s one academic year and it’s what works best at this time for our family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I'm grateful the school system is acting responsibly to help stop the spread.
covid doesn't spread in schools.
Again...can you Trumpers move to Zello or something. Why are uneducated boobs posting on DCUM?Anonymous wrote:Such an ignorant comment. You know very little about education, and if you say you do, then what you know is garbage. Students are getting an education via distance learning. Thanks to technology and resourceful teachers children are being educated. You will lose that argument every time. Schools might even open in the spring as soon as vaccines are rolled out and people stop gathering 'safely'.
Anonymous wrote:Such an ignorant comment. You know very little about education, and if you say you do, then what you know is garbage. Students are getting an education via distance learning. Thanks to technology and resourceful teachers children are being educated. You will lose that argument every time. Schools might even open in the spring as soon as vaccines are rolled out and people stop gathering 'safely'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US ha ever valued public education or public school teachers. Not surprising that a once-in-a-100-year pandemic that's killed 400,000 people in this country makes no difference. You know in a month, more people will have died from COVID-19 than in WWII. Just putting it in perspective how devastating this has been.
Of course nobody expects the pandemic to "make a difference" in the US' attitude towards public education - what a nonsensical way to put it. What is shocking is the depth of the disregard for this communal good, not only by leaders but by the teachers themselves and by a good part of the parents and the general population, to the point where kids are being deprived of access to proper schooling for over a year.
And while the death toll of the pandemic is indeed tragic, it is not comparable to WWII, which killed mostly young, healthy people in the prime of their lives, while nearly half of US Covid deaths happened in nursing homes. Those deaths absolutely matter as well, but the life years lost are not nearly the same. The fact that this comparison keeps getting brought up unqualified, and questioning it is pretty much taboo (just watch me getting flamed for saying it), is just more evidence that we are a gerontocratic society that has no concept of valuing kids and their quality of life.
You go, PP. Couldn't agree more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US ha ever valued public education or public school teachers. Not surprising that a once-in-a-100-year pandemic that's killed 400,000 people in this country makes no difference. You know in a month, more people will have died from COVID-19 than in WWII. Just putting it in perspective how devastating this has been.
Of course nobody expects the pandemic to "make a difference" in the US' attitude towards public education - what a nonsensical way to put it. What is shocking is the depth of the disregard for this communal good, not only by leaders but by the teachers themselves and by a good part of the parents and the general population, to the point where kids are being deprived of access to proper schooling for over a year.
And while the death toll of the pandemic is indeed tragic, it is not comparable to WWII, which killed mostly young, healthy people in the prime of their lives, while nearly half of US Covid deaths happened in nursing homes. Those deaths absolutely matter as well, but the life years lost are not nearly the same. The fact that this comparison keeps getting brought up unqualified, and questioning it is pretty much taboo (just watch me getting flamed for saying it), is just more evidence that we are a gerontocratic society that has no concept of valuing kids and their quality of life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved for this year. But I can’t stay away for another year. Solo-parenting our kids has been very stressful as my spouse went back in person in June and I work full-time too, which I don’t think I could have managed on my own without school for a full school year. March- August were difficult enough without much help, my spouse was only remote April-June. Our kids miss their dad, I miss him as well, and living as quasi-nomads is trying, at best. But the children are happy, have been in school since late August, and we’ve only had two potential exposures since we started. One class shut for a week, the other, in a separate incident, for 3 days. There has been no community spread in the school.
For the curious-
No routine testing
Class size is max of 12
Children and teacher are masked all day inside (this is elementary school and I have a K student who remembers no different than wearing the mask at school; so age has not been an issue in remaining properly masked)
Classrooms were retrofitted with a bathroom so children never leave the classroom to go into common areas
They eat at their desks which are spaced 6 feet apart
Each classroom has an outdoor entrance so children don’t mingle between grades
Playground equipment is wiped down between class usage and each grade has a separate recess block
With no testing, you cannot know spread. Sounds terrible to take the kids from their dad.
Anonymous wrote:The US ha ever valued public education or public school teachers. Not surprising that a once-in-a-100-year pandemic that's killed 400,000 people in this country makes no difference. You know in a month, more people will have died from COVID-19 than in WWII. Just putting it in perspective how devastating this has been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I'm grateful the school system is acting responsibly to help stop the spread.
covid doesn't spread in schools.
Is this a joke? Oh yes it does! My sister’sPA school closed due to so many cases of Covid spreading through her school.
DP. Of course there will be cases in schools. Infection rates in schools tend to reflect community spread, but are generally lower than the level of spread in the surrounding community. You don't know if the cases were spreading through the school, or whether they were acquired outside of it.
They only appear lower if you don't do routine testing of students and staff. They are not actually lower.
Anonymous wrote:
No, OP, I'd be delighted. Kids won't have received the vaccine in September 2021, and can spread the virus just like adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I'm grateful the school system is acting responsibly to help stop the spread.
covid doesn't spread in schools.
Is this a joke? Oh yes it does! My sister’sPA school closed due to so many cases of Covid spreading through her school.
DP. Of course there will be cases in schools. Infection rates in schools tend to reflect community spread, but are generally lower than the level of spread in the surrounding community. You don't know if the cases were spreading through the school, or whether they were acquired outside of it.