Anonymous wrote:I think it's safe to say that masks will stay at least through the end of this year, and quite possible into the next school year.
I guess everyone's invested in this topic already saw the news about the leaked audio with CDC director confirming they are 'recommending' for school masks to stay: https://www.dailywire.com/news/leaked-audio-reveals-cdc-director-saying-she-wont-halt-school-mask-guidance, in addition to some other statements reminding that CDC is just the politics puppets: “I will also say that guidance is just guidance, and all of these decisions, we’ve continued to say, have to be made at the local level." “As cases come down dramatically, we have deferred our guidance to the local jurisdictions.” DC WTA will be celebrating this, I bet.
Anonymous wrote:I’d wear a mask at the store for the rest of my life if it makes people feel safe, but I really, really want my kids to go mask free at school as soon as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers do want everyone to keep masking. 50% of us teachers have gotten sick, a significant percentage of that have long-COVID with long-term complications including heart and lung issues. Parents aren't allowed in schools right now (at least not many or for long periods) so I'm not sure what the huge concern is that they think is happening? Kids have been amazing at wearing masks, we do it all day, and its really not a problem to do so. I guarantee you that we will lose many, many older, high-risk and veteran teachers if a mask mandate is dropped this year. So take your pick - do you want qualified, veteran teachers providing high-quality instruction to masked kids or do you want maskless kids learning from substitutes - who at this point can be high school graduates, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, volunteers, etc. Which is it?
Please stop saying this. Speak for yourself. Myself and many of my colleagues do not want mask mandates to continue. Some of my colleagues do want it to continue and some don’t care either way. 50% have had Covid and a ‘significant percent’ have long Covid? How are you gathering this data? There is no central place with all reported teacher Covid cases. And define significant percent. Significant means something very specific when speaking about statistics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers do want everyone to keep masking. 50% of us teachers have gotten sick, a significant percentage of that have long-COVID with long-term complications including heart and lung issues. Parents aren't allowed in schools right now (at least not many or for long periods) so I'm not sure what the huge concern is that they think is happening? Kids have been amazing at wearing masks, we do it all day, and its really not a problem to do so. I guarantee you that we will lose many, many older, high-risk and veteran teachers if a mask mandate is dropped this year. So take your pick - do you want qualified, veteran teachers providing high-quality instruction to masked kids or do you want maskless kids learning from substitutes - who at this point can be high school graduates, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, volunteers, etc. Which is it?
Please stop saying this. Speak for yourself. Myself and many of my colleagues do not want mask mandates to continue. Some of my colleagues do want it to continue and some don’t care either way. 50% have had Covid and a ‘significant percent’ have long Covid? How are you gathering this data? There is no central place with all reported teacher Covid cases. And define significant percent. Significant means something very specific when speaking about statistics.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers do want everyone to keep masking. 50% of us teachers have gotten sick, a significant percentage of that have long-COVID with long-term complications including heart and lung issues. Parents aren't allowed in schools right now (at least not many or for long periods) so I'm not sure what the huge concern is that they think is happening? Kids have been amazing at wearing masks, we do it all day, and its really not a problem to do so. I guarantee you that we will lose many, many older, high-risk and veteran teachers if a mask mandate is dropped this year. So take your pick - do you want qualified, veteran teachers providing high-quality instruction to masked kids or do you want maskless kids learning from substitutes - who at this point can be high school graduates, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, volunteers, etc. Which is it?
Anonymous wrote:I would be fine with going masks option if we met certain established threshholds, with the understanding that masking would be required again if we went above those threshholds. (Perhaps it could be linked to the % of positive tests in a single school and/or the city with either percentage able to trigger a return to masking.)
That said, if teachers are very opposed, then I am fine remaining in masks for the rest of the year. If it's scientifically invalid and a comfort blanket for teachers, so be it. This year has sucked for teachers and they are clearly leaving their jobs (everywhere, not just DC; I have no idea if there are DC-specific numbers available) in higher numbers than usual at the moment. I don't want to add to that.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers do want everyone to keep masking. 50% of us teachers have gotten sick, a significant percentage of that have long-COVID with long-term complications including heart and lung issues. Parents aren't allowed in schools right now (at least not many or for long periods) so I'm not sure what the huge concern is that they think is happening? Kids have been amazing at wearing masks, we do it all day, and its really not a problem to do so. I guarantee you that we will lose many, many older, high-risk and veteran teachers if a mask mandate is dropped this year. So take your pick - do you want qualified, veteran teachers providing high-quality instruction to masked kids or do you want maskless kids learning from substitutes - who at this point can be high school graduates, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, volunteers, etc. Which is it?