Anonymous wrote:Stop paying teachers for work they aren’t doing and maybe their lackadaisical attitude toward reopening will shift.
Covid will be here for years, perhaps forever - even with a vaccine. Teachers (and all of us) will need to live with that. Not reopening schools for years isn’t an option.
Same teachers complaining about going into schools to pick up their belongings likely still going grocery shopping.
Anonymous wrote:Stop paying teachers for work they aren’t doing and maybe their lackadaisical attitude toward reopening will shift.
Covid will be here for years, perhaps forever - even with a vaccine. Teachers (and all of us) will need to live with that. Not reopening schools for years isn’t an option.
Same teachers complaining about going into schools to pick up their belongings likely still going grocery shopping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Online schooling during the fall semester is the responsible thing to do.
+1, and until there’s a vaccine with a proven track record
Ha! Vaccine with a "proven track record". Clearly a teacher. Are you trying to not return until retirement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS seems to subtly testing who in school-based staff is willing to return before a vaccine. Last week, DH and I got emails stating that we could sign up for slots to come pack our classrooms. We were promised PPE. If we declined, MCPS would have everything packed for us. DH declined. I signed up for a slot. I have second thoughts several times a day. Then today, there was a survey asking who was willing to teach some form of summer school. I declined.
Why? What are you busy doing? Both of you busy doing?
Why wouldn't you want to go in a room and pack your stuff? Is Corona floating in the hallway or something? Thats ridiculous.
You think there is Coronavirus in your classroom that hasn’t had any students in it for over 2 months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Maybe not publically as an individaul because it is a hugely unpopular idea with anyone that isn't a teacher, but the teachers' unions certainly
Where and when have the teachers' unions been clamoring to keep the schools closed in the fall?
I believe the DC teachers union has said as much. No return to the classroom until there is a vaccine. Nuts.
That will be years away. I guess it's going to be charter schools from here on out for DC.
I'm usually pro-union, but if that is going to be their stance, I hope someone will disempower them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS seems to subtly testing who in school-based staff is willing to return before a vaccine. Last week, DH and I got emails stating that we could sign up for slots to come pack our classrooms. We were promised PPE. If we declined, MCPS would have everything packed for us. DH declined. I signed up for a slot. I have second thoughts several times a day. Then today, there was a survey asking who was willing to teach some form of summer school. I declined.
Why? What are you busy doing? Both of you busy doing?
Why wouldn't you want to go in a room and pack your stuff? Is Corona floating in the hallway or something? Thats ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Online schooling during the fall semester is the responsible thing to do.
+1, and until there’s a vaccine with a proven track record
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have really tried to listen and understand both sides. I think the place I get hung up is with the multi-generational households. We know that the majority of deaths are occurring in the elderly populations. So what do we do for families who live with elderly people and have young children in the home? It's just not as simple as saying that at-risk people should isolate.
What's crazy is that some people argue that since nursing homes are such high-risk environments, a consequence of this crisis might be that people choose to care for their elderly relatives at home. But multigenerational households were exactly why the virus killed so many people in Italy, and if multigenerational households also mean that schools can't open because that would put the elderly at risk, then what? That doesn't seem like a solution that's fair to kids.
Anonymous wrote:
Some countries managed to handle the outbreak better than ours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Maybe not publically as an individaul because it is a hugely unpopular idea with anyone that isn't a teacher, but the teachers' unions certainly
Where and when have the teachers' unions been clamoring to keep the schools closed in the fall?
I believe the DC teachers union has said as much. No return to the classroom until there is a vaccine. Nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS seems to subtly testing who in school-based staff is willing to return before a vaccine. Last week, DH and I got emails stating that we could sign up for slots to come pack our classrooms. We were promised PPE. If we declined, MCPS would have everything packed for us. DH declined. I signed up for a slot. I have second thoughts several times a day. Then today, there was a survey asking who was willing to teach some form of summer school. I declined.
Why? What are you busy doing? Both of you busy doing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Maybe not publically as an individaul because it is a hugely unpopular idea with anyone that isn't a teacher, but the teachers' unions certainly
Where and when have the teachers' unions been clamoring to keep the schools closed in the fall?
I believe the DC teachers union has said as much. No return to the classroom until there is a vaccine. Nuts.
That will be years away. I guess it's going to be charter schools from here on out for DC.