Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lost the ability to tell A+ trolling from clinically significant anxiety.
Ah, DCUM, never change! Luv too weaponize mental illness. Yes, a parent is interested in continuing a helpful accommodation that was provided all of last school year! Must be mental illness!
This is OP.
Let's see if I can make it clearer than I already have.
Outdoor lunch makes a difference in terms of COVID mitigation for everyone, but particularly for us and a number of other families.
I am under no illusions it's a panacea.
My child does mask otherwise.
It's very much a "nice-to-have," but I can accept it if it's truly not possible.
Weirdly, I am aware of the existence of Virtual Academy and of the option of pulling my kid out for lunch.
I am a sentient being and can think of more than one possible reason it can't be done-- e.g., not enough lunch monitors, parent volunteers not allowed, concerns about kids running off, etc. But thanks!
Principal is being unreasonable in that they (according to another parent) specifically stated that they will not even give the reason for their refusal and will not discuss possible solutions.
Parents are willing to volunteer, and have stated that, including the one who relayed this story to me-- and me, a repeated PTA board member who has volunteered at the school many times.
I don't know if that can be allowed. I don't know much of anything until I speak to the principal, which I will, this week.
Thanks to the people who relayed that this is a school-by-school decision, and that some are doing it. That helps.
If I have any additional question for those who aren't invested in wishing COVID on my immunocompromised family, it's whether parents are allowed to volunteer for this duty at your school. Thanks.
I am curious, though, if this is A+ trolling, is it because it's so subtle? Is it because I'm not asking for much, or really anything, except for information? Is it because I am being so reasonable about what I'm willing to accept? I'm not great at judging trolling. Would love to learn more about how to properly grade it.
Great! Sounds like you’ve got it all figured out now.
Get the parents together and present the principal with a plan to consider.
Make sure the parents are background checked, vaccinated and boosted. Explain what the parents will do with the kids when it rains. And be prepared to be the back up person if one of those parents do not show up.
Let us know how it works out!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.
No they didn’t. How?
You clearly have no clue, so don’t say the cdc didn’t fail us. They did. COVID transmission is high right now in Montgomery County and across the entire countries. School opened yesterday and cases already doubled. Teachers and staff are out sick. Buses aren’t running. The failure is right in front of your eyes. Society isn’t functioning. We are still in a pandemic and the number of people with long term health impacts is piling up. If MCPS can’t find school aides, who do you think is available to take care of all the sick people?
Nope. MoCo community level status: Low
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/covid19/data/#dashboard
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.
No they didn’t. How?
You clearly have no clue, so don’t say the cdc didn’t fail us. They did. COVID transmission is high right now in Montgomery County and across the entire countries. School opened yesterday and cases already doubled. Teachers and staff are out sick. Buses aren’t running. The failure is right in front of your eyes. Society isn’t functioning. We are still in a pandemic and the number of people with long term health impacts is piling up. If MCPS can’t find school aides, who do you think is available to take care of all the sick people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lost the ability to tell A+ trolling from clinically significant anxiety.
Ah, DCUM, never change! Luv too weaponize mental illness. Yes, a parent is interested in continuing a helpful accommodation that was provided all of last school year! Must be mental illness!
This is OP.
Let's see if I can make it clearer than I already have.
Outdoor lunch makes a difference in terms of COVID mitigation for everyone, but particularly for us and a number of other families.
I am under no illusions it's a panacea.
My child does mask otherwise.
It's very much a "nice-to-have," but I can accept it if it's truly not possible.
Weirdly, I am aware of the existence of Virtual Academy and of the option of pulling my kid out for lunch.
I am a sentient being and can think of more than one possible reason it can't be done-- e.g., not enough lunch monitors, parent volunteers not allowed, concerns about kids running off, etc. But thanks!
Principal is being unreasonable in that they (according to another parent) specifically stated that they will not even give the reason for their refusal and will not discuss possible solutions.
Parents are willing to volunteer, and have stated that, including the one who relayed this story to me-- and me, a repeated PTA board member who has volunteered at the school many times.
I don't know if that can be allowed. I don't know much of anything until I speak to the principal, which I will, this week.
Thanks to the people who relayed that this is a school-by-school decision, and that some are doing it. That helps.
If I have any additional question for those who aren't invested in wishing COVID on my immunocompromised family, it's whether parents are allowed to volunteer for this duty at your school. Thanks.
I am curious, though, if this is A+ trolling, is it because it's so subtle? Is it because I'm not asking for much, or really anything, except for information? Is it because I am being so reasonable about what I'm willing to accept? I'm not great at judging trolling. Would love to learn more about how to properly grade it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lost the ability to tell A+ trolling from clinically significant anxiety.
Ah, DCUM, never change! Luv too weaponize mental illness. Yes, a parent is interested in continuing a helpful accommodation that was provided all of last school year! Must be mental illness!
This is OP.
Let's see if I can make it clearer than I already have.
Outdoor lunch makes a difference in terms of COVID mitigation for everyone, but particularly for us and a number of other families.
I am under no illusions it's a panacea.
My child does mask otherwise.
It's very much a "nice-to-have," but I can accept it if it's truly not possible.
Weirdly, I am aware of the existence of Virtual Academy and of the option of pulling my kid out for lunch.
I am a sentient being and can think of more than one possible reason it can't be done-- e.g., not enough lunch monitors, parent volunteers not allowed, concerns about kids running off, etc. But thanks!
Principal is being unreasonable in that they (according to another parent) specifically stated that they will not even give the reason for their refusal and will not discuss possible solutions.
Parents are willing to volunteer, and have stated that, including the one who relayed this story to me-- and me, a repeated PTA board member who has volunteered at the school many times.
I don't know if that can be allowed. I don't know much of anything until I speak to the principal, which I will, this week.
Thanks to the people who relayed that this is a school-by-school decision, and that some are doing it. That helps.
If I have any additional question for those who aren't invested in wishing COVID on my immunocompromised family, it's whether parents are allowed to volunteer for this duty at your school. Thanks.
I am curious, though, if this is A+ trolling, is it because it's so subtle? Is it because I'm not asking for much, or really anything, except for information? Is it because I am being so reasonable about what I'm willing to accept? I'm not great at judging trolling. Would love to learn more about how to properly grade it.
Anonymous wrote:I've lost the ability to tell A+ trolling from clinically significant anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:I've lost the ability to tell A+ trolling from clinically significant anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.
No they didn’t. How?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county no longer pays for monitors and we don’t have enough staff to cover outdoor lunch. It’s a logistical nightmare to shift gears when the weather doesn’t permit outdoor lunch; unless parents actually want to volunteer (and they don’t). So go ahead and waste your principals time complaining about something they have obviously considered and dealt with for the past two years.
MCPS still has federal covid money that is unspent. It was literally designed to support initiatives such as this. I get that it’s hard to hire people (everywhere), but just because some people are over covid does not mean these funds should not be allocated to support the one part of the day that is highest risk to students who are otherwise masking.
There are so many hundreds paraeducator jobs in the county. It's not like mcps isn't trying to fill these jobs.
I don’t think a lunch monitor position has the same hours or qualification requirements as a paraeducator. I also agree with the poster upthread that you don’t need double the number of staff to supervise outdoor lunch. There’s a ratio they need to meet, whether they are inside or outside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.
No they didn’t. How?
You clearly have no clue, so don’t say the cdc didn’t fail us. They did. COVID transmission is high right now in Montgomery County and across the entire countries. School opened yesterday and cases already doubled. Teachers and staff are out sick. Buses aren’t running. The failure is right in front of your eyes. Society isn’t functioning. We are still in a pandemic and the number of people with long term health impacts is piling up. If MCPS can’t find school aides, who do you think is available to take care of all the sick people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.
No they didn’t. How?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are not even distancing anymore at our elementary school. DS said that they're back to being scrunched in - 2 tables per class.
If you look at the pictures posted by MCPS and the schools there is zero distancing.
I mean, the CDC no longer recommends distancing.
The cdc failed us.