Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For what it’s worth it might still be valuable for kids in all virtual to do the survey. It gives them countywide info on health.
Yes. APS requested one fill it out so they can tell the health of the overall community. But people just like to complain.
Well I'm already monitoring my kid's work, acting as their IEP support, and doing my full-time job. I'm ignoring it. If at some point my kid actually goes into the school building, I will fill it out.
Anonymous wrote:For what it’s worth it might still be valuable for kids in all virtual to do the survey. It gives them countywide info on health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For what it’s worth it might still be valuable for kids in all virtual to do the survey. It gives them countywide info on health.
Yes. APS requested one fill it out so they can tell the health of the overall community. But people just like to complain.
Anonymous wrote:For what it’s worth it might still be valuable for kids in all virtual to do the survey. It gives them countywide info on health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really not this complicated folks.
Why so glib? Filling it out isn't complicated, true. But that assumes that you actually received it, which many didn't. APS never communicated that families had to show the green check mark, so it's important that parents know to screenshot the green check mark to facilitate the drop off process. Further, there are some who were able to receive the green check mark without actually answering the symptom questions, so that seems like a pretty big point of failure in all of this.
Anonymous wrote:It’s really not this complicated folks.