Anonymous wrote:I agree that vaccine is the key. Without it, I cannot imagine anyone taking on the responsibility of starting regular school with virus still being present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No inside info, but until there’s a vaccine, 100% back in the classroom will not happen. There’s just not enough space, teachers or busses. No school system was designed to support the constraints that will be in place until a vaccine is widely available.
Sorry to be a down, I just don’t think it’s going to happen.
Like half the country already announced going back to normal instruction in the fall. And there is no guarantee a vaccine will ever be available so this is just not feasible.
Tell me one school system that has announced that school will resume in the fall exactly the way it was last year.
Anonymous wrote:
You have to follow GUIDELINES so teachers and staff have the confidence to return. No public school family wants FT online learning, and no small town with a small hospital wants a Covid outbreak. So you follow the guidelines to the best of your ability, and hope they're reasonable. Maybe we can't do 6' distance, but can do 4'.
Anonymous wrote:PA released their guidelines for schools:
https://www.education.pa.gov/Documents/K-12/Safe%20Schools/COVID/GuidanceDocuments/Pre-K%20to%2012%20Reopening%20Guidance.pdf
They plan to open in July (summer school).
It's sort of a dense document, but as i read it, looks liek things will generally be open this fall, with minor modifiations.
Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure we’ll be getting a second wave from the protestors and looters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on a new england school board and we have determined that there is no possible way to return FT under normal conditions with current CDC guidelines. We don't have enough classroom space to distance, we don't have enough bathrooms to allow proper contact tracing, we don't have enough buses to safely transport, etc.
So unless CDC guidelines significantly change in the next 3 months, we have to adopt some sort of hybrid model.
We'll have several different models and contingencies to those models, and hope to have more science-based guidance by mid-August to open in some fashion.
So you will just not have school resume until cases are at 0 then? The cdc guidelines are to be used as a wait for it...GUIDELINE. It's not the Bible on going back to school. And CDC themselves knows it's not realistic for any school system to do all of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/06/03/868507524/israel-orders-schools-to-close-when-covid-19-cases-are-discovered?utm_term=nprnews&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=npr&utm_source=facebook.com&fbclid=IwAR2Sy30Nnp4LWXmzjGYrdUeQ40tdJAb_Hycdk-zJnLtnEvoLJM1e-AeEoN4
They went back to school in May. Honestly that was just dumb.
I sometimes wonder why I comment here at all... Please read the article before saying things like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on a new england school board and we have determined that there is no possible way to return FT under normal conditions with current CDC guidelines. We don't have enough classroom space to distance, we don't have enough bathrooms to allow proper contact tracing, we don't have enough buses to safely transport, etc.
So unless CDC guidelines significantly change in the next 3 months, we have to adopt some sort of hybrid model.
We'll have several different models and contingencies to those models, and hope to have more science-based guidance by mid-August to open in some fashion.
So you will just not have school resume until cases are at 0 then? The cdc guidelines are to be used as a wait for it...GUIDELINE. It's not the Bible on going back to school. And CDC themselves knows it's not realistic for any school system to do all of it.
Why do you think it’s all or nothing? I don’t understand that narrow way of thinking.