Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the deal with the anonymous tweet about 25% of these phase one teachers/staff contracting Covid? Are there any legs around that?
No, there isn't. If it were anywhere close to true, APS would be required to report it and it would turn up in the Covid outbreak dashboard for Arlington (there have been zero in K-12 schools in Arlington County for the entire pandemic). You only need two confirmed cases in a facility to have it be listed as an outbreak.
Also worth noting that the tweet appears to have been deleted.
If you look on the latest on AEM, an APS staff person who works with the superintendent posted that they did indeed announce 55 have been infected, however that includes staff not working in person in schools. The major issue is that there’s been no transparency on this unlike other local counties.
Yeah and why did this have to leak through staff and then AEM before he admitted that? Come on APS. Other schools are disclosing Covid cases. Be better.
Because a 0.8% infection across a large population that aren’t even in the same physical location simply isn’t news right now. It’s completely expected.
This. This right here. This is either APS or APE chiming in. APS said this in the staff meeting and the APE crowd said it on AEM.
They are trying to make the case rate look lower by using all 7000 APS staff as the denominator. But that's not honest. Most of the staff are working virtually. Only 237 are back in person. If you instead use the 237 as the denominator, you get a 24% case rate. Quite different.
Of course, we don't actually know how many of those 55 cases were from the in person staff because APS will not say. But because virtual staff are not required to report cases to APS, I would have to think that the vast majority are from in person.
Virtual staff requesting CARES leave due to COVID would report.
+1. One of my kids’ teachers is currently on sick leave because she has covid. She admitted to the parents in her email detailing the sub plan that she caught it visiting a family member over the holidays.
If not, it's the same scenario. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the deal with the anonymous tweet about 25% of these phase one teachers/staff contracting Covid? Are there any legs around that?
No, there isn't. If it were anywhere close to true, APS would be required to report it and it would turn up in the Covid outbreak dashboard for Arlington (there have been zero in K-12 schools in Arlington County for the entire pandemic). You only need two confirmed cases in a facility to have it be listed as an outbreak.
Also worth noting that the tweet appears to have been deleted.
If you look on the latest on AEM, an APS staff person who works with the superintendent posted that they did indeed announce 55 have been infected, however that includes staff not working in person in schools. The major issue is that there’s been no transparency on this unlike other local counties.
Yeah and why did this have to leak through staff and then AEM before he admitted that? Come on APS. Other schools are disclosing Covid cases. Be better.
Because a 0.8% infection across a large population that aren’t even in the same physical location simply isn’t news right now. It’s completely expected.
This. This right here. This is either APS or APE chiming in. APS said this in the staff meeting and the APE crowd said it on AEM.
They are trying to make the case rate look lower by using all 7000 APS staff as the denominator. But that's not honest. Most of the staff are working virtually. Only 237 are back in person. If you instead use the 237 as the denominator, you get a 24% case rate. Quite different.
Of course, we don't actually know how many of those 55 cases were from the in person staff because APS will not say. But because virtual staff are not required to report cases to APS, I would have to think that the vast majority are from in person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
I actually do care about them, and I’m aware of the statistics on what happens to kids who drop out of high school. Do you?
Yup. Want their families to be healthy and safe. Want them to have good lung functioning and not miss a ton of school. I do.
I’m sorry. I though you were talking about SOLs that haven’t happened yet. The pandemic is happening now. Virginia just reported the most cases ever. So... what the hell are you going on about?
Do you understand what "dropping out" means? Kids who drop out are not going to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
I actually do care about them, and I’m aware of the statistics on what happens to kids who drop out of high school. Do you?
Yup. Want their families to be healthy and safe. Want them to have good lung functioning and not miss a ton of school. I do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
I actually do care about them, and I’m aware of the statistics on what happens to kids who drop out of high school. Do you?
Anonymous wrote:CARES is over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
They do matter. They won’t have had suffered the effects of being out sick with CoVID, or passing it on to an adult they depend. When you’re dead, you’re dead a long time. You really care about those kids, huh? I’m sure you do. Next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Those kids don’t matter because most of them are poor and non-white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the reality is- SOL scores probably will drop. Who cares? If you’ve survived this without losing someone you love, feel grateful. The kids will be ok.
No, not all of them will. Failing grades among high schoolers are a huge risk factor for dropping out. With a bunch of kids feeling increasingly disengaged with school and facing the possibility of having to repeat classes in order to graduate, we will see an increased drop-out rate coming out of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the deal with the anonymous tweet about 25% of these phase one teachers/staff contracting Covid? Are there any legs around that?
No, there isn't. If it were anywhere close to true, APS would be required to report it and it would turn up in the Covid outbreak dashboard for Arlington (there have been zero in K-12 schools in Arlington County for the entire pandemic). You only need two confirmed cases in a facility to have it be listed as an outbreak.
Also worth noting that the tweet appears to have been deleted.
If you look on the latest on AEM, an APS staff person who works with the superintendent posted that they did indeed announce 55 have been infected, however that includes staff not working in person in schools. The major issue is that there’s been no transparency on this unlike other local counties.
Yeah and why did this have to leak through staff and then AEM before he admitted that? Come on APS. Other schools are disclosing Covid cases. Be better.
Because a 0.8% infection across a large population that aren’t even in the same physical location simply isn’t news right now. It’s completely expected.
This. This right here. This is either APS or APE chiming in. APS said this in the staff meeting and the APE crowd said it on AEM.
They are trying to make the case rate look lower by using all 7000 APS staff as the denominator. But that's not honest. Most of the staff are working virtually. Only 237 are back in person. If you instead use the 237 as the denominator, you get a 24% case rate. Quite different.
Of course, we don't actually know how many of those 55 cases were from the in person staff because APS will not say. But because virtual staff are not required to report cases to APS, I would have to think that the vast majority are from in person.
Virtual staff requesting CARES leave due to COVID would report.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the deal with the anonymous tweet about 25% of these phase one teachers/staff contracting Covid? Are there any legs around that?
No, there isn't. If it were anywhere close to true, APS would be required to report it and it would turn up in the Covid outbreak dashboard for Arlington (there have been zero in K-12 schools in Arlington County for the entire pandemic). You only need two confirmed cases in a facility to have it be listed as an outbreak.
Also worth noting that the tweet appears to have been deleted.
If you look on the latest on AEM, an APS staff person who works with the superintendent posted that they did indeed announce 55 have been infected, however that includes staff not working in person in schools. The major issue is that there’s been no transparency on this unlike other local counties.
Yeah and why did this have to leak through staff and then AEM before he admitted that? Come on APS. Other schools are disclosing Covid cases. Be better.
Because a 0.8% infection across a large population that aren’t even in the same physical location simply isn’t news right now. It’s completely expected.
This. This right here. This is either APS or APE chiming in. APS said this in the staff meeting and the APE crowd said it on AEM.
They are trying to make the case rate look lower by using all 7000 APS staff as the denominator. But that's not honest. Most of the staff are working virtually. Only 237 are back in person. If you instead use the 237 as the denominator, you get a 24% case rate. Quite different.
Of course, we don't actually know how many of those 55 cases were from the in person staff because APS will not say. But because virtual staff are not required to report cases to APS, I would have to think that the vast majority are from in person.