Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Everything you wrote has already proved to be inaccurate this week.
Ha. You're funny. The new policy hasn't been applied yet. The cases of quarantine and isolation we've had were triggered by positive tests reported to the school. Not symptom-based identification.
And the reason we've had the numbers of cases we've had, is because we're in a Delta surge. What did you expect?
MCPS is desperately trying to not close schools entirely.
WRONG! This policy has been in effect all week. Multiple classes have already been quarantined based on a single symptom, including at my kids school.
Calm down. There were a couple of cases based on symptoms, but most were Covid positives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
Glad to hear they're being responsible with the lives of our children.
The lives of children are not in jeopardy. Stop with the drama. There is no evidence that children are at a higher risk with Delta. None. We need to manage the virus by wearing masks, getting vaccinated if we’re eligible, and using common sense (eg hand washing). The lives and well being of children are more adversely affected by school closings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Everything you wrote has already proved to be inaccurate this week.
Ha. You're funny. The new policy hasn't been applied yet. The cases of quarantine and isolation we've had were triggered by positive tests reported to the school. Not symptom-based identification.
And the reason we've had the numbers of cases we've had, is because we're in a Delta surge. What did you expect?
MCPS is desperately trying to not close schools entirely.
WRONG! This policy has been in effect all week. Multiple classes have already been quarantined based on a single symptom, including at my kids school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
The guidance also said they can return to school if there is an alternative diagnosis. If a kid has allergies or regularly has diarrhea, take them to the dr who will do a covid test and give them an 'alternative diagnosis.'
If your kid has a fever, new pronounced cough, loss of taste/smell, etc. then for heaven's sake, don't send them to school to start with!
Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this has already been discussed but what if the student experiencing the one symptom has been vaccinated? Will the close contacts have to quarantine then too? My vaccinated 13 yr old sometimes coughs from mild asthma and it can just happen mid day or whatever. For example, running at PE class.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Everything you wrote has already proved to be inaccurate this week.
Ha. You're funny. The new policy hasn't been applied yet. The cases of quarantine and isolation we've had were triggered by positive tests reported to the school. Not symptom-based identification.
And the reason we've had the numbers of cases we've had, is because we're in a Delta surge. What did you expect?
MCPS is desperately trying to not close schools entirely.
Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
Glad to hear they're being responsible with the lives of our children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Everything you wrote has already proved to be inaccurate this week.
Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People.
Relax.
Kids don't naturally come up to teachers and say they've had a little bit of diarrhea. As long as symptoms are mild and they can manage on their own, teachers will not be informed, and nothing is going to happen. For better or for worse, depending on your point of view![]()
It's only if your child is seriously ill that the school will realize something is up and will trigger this whole Covid protocol. No teacher in their right mind will break the glass for a random cough. Understand that beyond the words of the policy, we're dealing with people and their non-robot judgement!
So lots of Covid cases, colds, food poisoning, asthma, allergies, will NOT get identified. The serious cases will be, and for chronic sufferers of asthma and allergies, like my son, I'm sure they'll be understanding, with or without a doctor's letter.
Delta will merely be dampened, because all asymptomatic and low-symptom cases will continue to circulate and spew.
Everything you wrote has already proved to be inaccurate this week.