Anonymous wrote:My kids managed and came out ok. They're both very self-motivated so did fine on the academic side. I'm sure it's not what it could have been though. But as teenagers they missed out on some important things socially. Millions of kids had it worse.
But in retrospect, closing public schools for a year and a half - while privates were allowed to stay open, not to mention all of red America - was disastrous. Just read some of the comments here. We collectively decided to throw public school kids under the bus. Unforgivable. A complete societal failure.
Anonymous wrote:It did not. However socially, it did.
Anonymous wrote:Child #1 Academically, not a bit. Mental health wise, she got so depressed I thought we might lose her. Luckily, she and I are very close, she confided her painful thoughts, and we were able to get her the help she needed. She's good now.
Child #2 Didn't even blink He was and is totally fine
The young students I taught? They struggled. The next year, some were okay, some struggled. This past year was so horrible, I quit mid year. I was afraid every day that a kid was going to seriously hurt me. I suspect that out of desperation, and through no fault of their own, parents just put kids in front of screens all day every day. Some parents were so afraid of covid in the community I taught in they almost never left their homes for 2 years. Kids with disabilities did not get EI because parents were too afraid. And many, many people who saw our early childhood classrooms remarked on the similarity to a psych ward. Kids were/are severely disturbed and I don't know if they'll ever recover mentally and emotionally. And I know the kids from preK coming up are just as screwed up. They run around the classrooms, jump off furniture, bite staff and draw blood, scream profanities, destroy class libraries (my friend took every thing she owned in the room home so it wouldn't get ripped).
I think we faced a lose-lose situation and now we're all paying for it. I don't really think public schools are equipped to deal with the fall out. If I did, I might have stayed.
Anonymous wrote:My sister in law is a public school ELA teacher and brought a stack of essays with her to my house as she’s staying over because her water heater flooded her apartment. I perused though some of them out of curiosity. She teaches the 8th grade. Some of these kids write like they are in elementary school. Serious and consistent spelling mistakes (read is raed, you are is ur, mention is mensin etc), failure to write more than 2 sentences for a 500 word essay, run on sentences, poor punctuation etc. She told me most of the kids are very behind and a good number should not proceed to high school. She said that in the last 3 years the overall quality of the work the kids are producing is down. How much do you think the pandemic hurt your child academically?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not at all. Thank goodness for us knowing scientists who told us early on to form a bubble, having nannies, and working from home. It really allowed us to spend more time with our kids than we usually get and though we're not teachers we were able to pick up where online teaching left off each day and drum in what the kids had been taught.
I sincerely regret not forming a pod or hiring a nanny. Remember in 2020 when we were castigated about “pod privilege”? Good times.