Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line.. music classrooms and band practice and concert areas the biggest exposure for kids at this time out of all school activities.
[citation needed]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line.. music classrooms and band practice and concert areas the biggest exposure for kids at this time out of all school activities.
[citation needed]
Seriously? Is this a term paper?
What’s next?... citation to the statement “ bathrooms are cesspools full of bacterias”?
Frankly, this is an opinion, not a science in both cases, an opinion based in fairly accurate imagination
that can lead to facts, should you wish to run tests in the bathroom or the air quality in the orchestra/ band area .. germ specific.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line.. music classrooms and band practice and concert areas the biggest exposure for kids at this time out of all school activities.
[citation needed]
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line.. music classrooms and band practice and concert areas the biggest exposure for kids at this time out of all school activities.
Anonymous wrote:Our PTA is weighing cancelling 2 upcoming social events attended by hundreds. It would be nice to have some MCPS guidance as we do so but there’s been radio silence.
Anonymous wrote:People, use some common sense. If you don't feel safe going, then don't go. Preaching about cancelling meetings on this site is silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are well off and our kids own their own instruments. No way they are blowing on others.
No need! Let me illustrate...
Aerial Symphony of Coronavirus
In the back row sits Johnny.. he heavily inhales and blows into his tuba.. the air flies solid ten rows forward, Sussie and Leo sit in front of Jonny, inhale his air as they are ready to blow into their flutes and saxophones where they mix Johnnys mighty breath with their own and off they send it to the next row where Jimmy and Kayla are ready to take deep breath....
I think you don't know what a tuba looks like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are well off and our kids own their own instruments. No way they are blowing on others.
No need! Let me illustrate...
Aerial Symphony of Coronavirus
In the back row sits Johnny.. he heavily inhales and blows into his tuba.. the air flies solid ten rows forward, Sussie and Leo sit in front of Jonny, inhale his air as they are ready to blow into their flutes and saxophones where they mix Johnnys mighty breath with their own and off they send it to the next row where Jimmy and Kayla are ready to take deep breath....
I think you don't know what a tuba looks like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am sort of wondering about the band/orchestra festival next week. That's a lot of kids crammed in together, and I'm not sure how much benefit to anyone.
Thinking of kids playing instruments breathing the air, blowing it out of tubas, saxophones, flutes...
Lol! My kid plays cello, but when you put it that way, seems like it should definitely be cancelled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are well off and our kids own their own instruments. No way they are blowing on others.
No need! Let me illustrate...
Aerial Symphony of Coronavirus
In the back row sits Johnny.. he heavily inhales and blows into his tuba.. the air flies solid ten rows forward, Sussie and Leo sit in front of Jonny, inhale his air as they are ready to blow into their flutes and saxophones where they mix Johnnys mighty breath with their own and off they send it to the next row where Jimmy and Kayla are ready to take deep breath....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, use some common sense. If you don't feel safe going, then don't go. Preaching about cancelling meetings on this site is silly.
Well, not really. Because the point isn't that we're concerned for our individual children or our own selves or families, but we are concerned about the community impact. Kids seem to be carriers for the most part. The point of social distancing isn't to protect our own children, but to slow and mitigate the impact on our healthcare system.
I get what you're saying, but this is one of those cases where the individualist "if you don't like it, don't do it" doesn't apply very well. A communitarian approach makes more sense.
Anonymous wrote:We are well off and our kids own their own instruments. No way they are blowing on others.