Anonymous wrote:So I'm a teacher, different district with kids in MCPS. We have received almost no guidance from our district but that means very little work over these few weeks.
It's tough as I have three little kids but the truth is I am not really working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all sound like stay at home moms. I'm sure this is relaxing for you and you are posting cool pictures of you cooking with your kids and doing all your homeschooling but for those of us with health care jobs this is a disaster.
+1. What is even better is seeing people in my town that were previously SAHM with their 2 kids in school, and they are now posting how hard it is to have to take care of their kids. Forget about academics...these people are just complaining that their kids are home. (elementary school kids mostly). I find this one of the saddest things I have seen beyond the health implications of this pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Nasty, nasty OP.
Anonymous wrote:More proof that teachers are seen as nothing more than educated babysitters by most parents.
I'm seeing complaint post after complaint post from parents on FB about how they can't "handle" teaching their 1-3 kids. Throwing in the towel and giving up after one or two difficult days. Now try doing that but with 20+ kids.
Anonymous wrote:Funny that everybody is like “save the restaurants order out!” and “keep paying your housekeepers and nannies if you can afford it” and yet people feel like TEACHERS shouldn’t be getting paid???
Goodness, they take care of your kids and educate them for very little money, and then they like everybody else are being thrown into a new world where we have to deal with being in our houses and around our kids ALL THE TIME and two weeks in people are demanding some kind of smooth transition into an learning system literally nobody is prepared for.
If I had it my way teachers would just be given the rest of the year off but, 3 months of formal learning out of years and years of education isn’t worth all the hassle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind them being paid. But it seems like teachers just don't understand what the rest of us are going through either being laid off or working full time plus telework.
I think they should have to work in the summer if this ends in June. July and August could be 2 months of instruction.
Agree... Kids will be so behind.
Anonymous wrote:STFU. The teachers I know have been in several zoom meetings every day trying to help create new ways to teach. They’ve been communicating with their students and parents. They have been researching and preparing appropriate optional online learning activities. They didn’t choose this, remember?
Anonymous wrote:STFU. The teachers I know have been in several zoom meetings every day trying to help create new ways to teach. They’ve been communicating with their students and parents. They have been researching and preparing appropriate optional online learning activities. They didn’t choose this, remember?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shut up. I have a lot of problems with MCPS and whiny teachers, but seriously: They are learning brand new skills. They are trying to figure out a new way to educate our kids. They may be trying to do their work with their own children underfoot. The world has changed in completely unexpected ways in the last 2.5 weeks. Give everyone including teachers a break. Your kids, and mine, and everyone else's, will catch up later.
DP... I work in high tech and have been wfh for a while. I was just thinking today that I'm used to working remotely, dealing with zoom, google chat, email... etc.. it's not hard. BUT, I realized that most people, especially teachers, probably aren't used to doing that much online, and so their learning curve is a lot higher.
Have patience, people. I know everyone is frazzled and frustrated. Believe me.. I've lost my cool with my kids several times, and I'm not super happy with the lack of learning, either.
not being disrespcteful
But teaching 130+ kids online isn't the same as managing a conference call and multitasking by answering emails.
I've been on both sides, and teaching is a hell of a lot harder. I know three LMS for that matter.
Anonymous wrote:You all sound like stay at home moms. I'm sure this is relaxing for you and you are posting cool pictures of you cooking with your kids and doing all your homeschooling but for those of us with health care jobs this is a disaster.