Anonymous wrote:Well there’s another super pneumonia in Kazakhstan worse than COVID-19. Covid is kicking the shi$ out of people down South. We all need to hunker down again by late August I’m betting. Better to be prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If this is accurate, MCPS is saying: it's just too tough, we can't figure it out, so we'll just kind of dribble along with remote instruction and see what happens.
Typical MCPS. FCPS and ACPS in Virginia can pull this off, so why can't MCPS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is our understanding that MCPS is planning to bring back students in transition grades (pre-K/K, 6, and 9) first, and other grades in phases. School schedules in person and online will vary by school (ES/MS/HS). Students in all grades will start the year online, and MCPS hopes to have all willing students back in school buildings for 1-2 days a week by Thanksgiving. Some of the bigger challenges include transportation (12 students on a bus instead of up to 77) and having enough teachers to teach smaller classes in person while simultaneously teaching students in online classes at home. MCPS is hoping to have some students back in buildings 2 times a week as early as September (but not from day one). They just don’t think all students will be back in buildings 1-2 days a week until later in the fall.
Actually, I think this isn't a bad plan. First you get the school year started for everyone with DL. Lots of training and curriculum work is happening this summer for teachers. Focus on getting kids used to the DL environment and working. Then, each school will have a subset of students to bring into the building. It is going to take some effort to get all of the moving parts to function correctly for a hybrid rotation. Meanwhile, distance learning will still happen while the F2F part gets figured out. Add more students as the first group gets settled.
If cases remain under control, then we might get to a stable, hybrid situation that can be maintained for several months. If cases rise and school needs to shut down again, then DL is still in place as the default.
You are kidding yourself. Having this kind of setup plan is just giving them leeway to never actually have any f2f education for the entirety of the year. I can guarantee you the f2f plan is all talk and won't ever happen. It's to hard for them and they don't do hard.
Anonymous wrote:If this is accurate, MCPS is saying: it's just too tough, we can't figure it out, so we'll just kind of dribble along with remote instruction and see what happens.
Anonymous wrote:It is our understanding that MCPS is planning to bring back students in transition grades (pre-K/K, 6, and 9) first, and other grades in phases. School schedules in person and online will vary by school (ES/MS/HS). Students in all grades will start the year online, and MCPS hopes to have all willing students back in school buildings for 1-2 days a week by Thanksgiving. Some of the bigger challenges include transportation (12 students on a bus instead of up to 77) and having enough teachers to teach smaller classes in person while simultaneously teaching students in online classes at home. MCPS is hoping to have some students back in buildings 2 times a week as early as September (but not from day one). They just don’t think all students will be back in buildings 1-2 days a week until later in the fall.
Actually, I think this isn't a bad plan. First you get the school year started for everyone with DL. Lots of training and curriculum work is happening this summer for teachers. Focus on getting kids used to the DL environment and working. Then, each school will have a subset of students to bring into the building. It is going to take some effort to get all of the moving parts to function correctly for a hybrid rotation. Meanwhile, distance learning will still happen while the F2F part gets figured out. Add more students as the first group gets settled.
If cases remain under control, then we might get to a stable, hybrid situation that can be maintained for several months. If cases rise and school needs to shut down again, then DL is still in place as the default.
Anonymous wrote:It is our understanding that MCPS is planning to bring back students in transition grades (pre-K/K, 6, and 9) first, and other grades in phases. School schedules in person and online will vary by school (ES/MS/HS). Students in all grades will start the year online, and MCPS hopes to have all willing students back in school buildings for 1-2 days a week by Thanksgiving. Some of the bigger challenges include transportation (12 students on a bus instead of up to 77) and having enough teachers to teach smaller classes in person while simultaneously teaching students in online classes at home. MCPS is hoping to have some students back in buildings 2 times a week as early as September (but not from day one). They just don’t think all students will be back in buildings 1-2 days a week until later in the fall.
Actually, I think this isn't a bad plan. First you get the school year started for everyone with DL. Lots of training and curriculum work is happening this summer for teachers. Focus on getting kids used to the DL environment and working. Then, each school will have a subset of students to bring into the building. It is going to take some effort to get all of the moving parts to function correctly for a hybrid rotation. Meanwhile, distance learning will still happen while the F2F part gets figured out. Add more students as the first group gets settled.
If cases remain under control, then we might get to a stable, hybrid situation that can be maintained for several months. If cases rise and school needs to shut down again, then DL is still in place as the default.
It is our understanding that MCPS is planning to bring back students in transition grades (pre-K/K, 6, and 9) first, and other grades in phases. School schedules in person and online will vary by school (ES/MS/HS). Students in all grades will start the year online, and MCPS hopes to have all willing students back in school buildings for 1-2 days a week by Thanksgiving. Some of the bigger challenges include transportation (12 students on a bus instead of up to 77) and having enough teachers to teach smaller classes in person while simultaneously teaching students in online classes at home. MCPS is hoping to have some students back in buildings 2 times a week as early as September (but not from day one). They just don’t think all students will be back in buildings 1-2 days a week until later in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Thanksgiving date is intentional so that they can cancel in person due to virus load and go distance the entire year. Just watch.
Smartest most responsible thing to do. I swear I saw a Jan date posted they have since retracted. I am all in for safe and healthy school start whenever. And I work.
I never would have believed there were so many people posting on DCUM that the safest, most responsible thing to do is for kids to miss 1 1/3 years of school.
It’s called a pandemic.
It's called taking the easy way out.
It's called ignoring the science.
It's called sacrificing our children.
Anonymous wrote:PPs, where on FB did you see this? I’m in some staff and parent MCPS groups and have seen nothing about this.
Anonymous wrote:If this is accurate, MCPS is saying: it's just too tough, we can't figure it out, so we'll just kind of dribble along with remote instruction and see what happens.