Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Omfg Isn’t he the superintendent?
Not for the non-existent MVA.
How sick are you?
Yes, he is still the omfg superintendent for all MCPS students, even the charter school students.
There are no charter school students in Montgomery County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
Oh no! Nothing works. Everything is ruined.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Omfg Isn’t he the superintendent?
Not for the non-existent MVA.
How sick are you?
Yes, he is still the omfg superintendent for all MCPS students, even the charter school students.
There are no charter school students in Montgomery County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Omfg Isn’t he the superintendent?
Not for the non-existent MVA.
How sick are you?
Yes, he is still the omfg superintendent for all MCPS students, even the charter school students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Omfg Isn’t he the superintendent?
Not for the non-existent MVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Omfg Isn’t he the superintendent?
Anonymous wrote:Omfg, what does all these posts have to do with Taylor. Not another school for this and other for former mva-ers etc.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.
Why "daily cleaning"?
Are you implying that a school for kids with compromised immune systems should be cleaned less frequently than the typical MCPS school, which is daily? Seriously?
MCPS just does a superficial cleaning. They sweep and collect the trash, maybe wipe down common areas. They don't have enough staff to do it. Some teachers are great about cleaning. We had one teacher in ES who had the kids wipe down their desks, supplies and chairs 1-2 times a week with wipes, and she did the main areas. It cut down a lot on colds that year (and yes, I gladly donated tons of wipes).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.
Why "daily cleaning"?
Are you implying that a school for kids with compromised immune systems should be cleaned less frequently than the typical MCPS school, which is daily? Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.
Why "daily cleaning"?
Are you implying that a school for kids with compromised immune systems should be cleaned less frequently than the typical MCPS school, which is daily? Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.
Why "daily cleaning"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.
Why "daily cleaning"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are going to lose their IDs. Lanyards will become a nuisance and be used in roughhousing or catching on a corner and knocking someone over.
How about scanning students' palms? will McPs be able to get such "technology" in this century?
Much better than forcing kids to wear their IDs around their necks on lanyards, which won’t be effective at all once the cold & flu and COVID surges spike again and kids are all masked up while they walk the halls.
Kids aren’t going to mask. They will go sick.
This selfishness is exactly why we need a virtual academy
For the kids that refuse to mask?
They spread it to everyone. They need a school for kids with or who have close family members with health issues. Virtual or in person. They can use the old BOE building and convert it into a school at least for k-8th and put in good ventilation, daily cleaning, have masking, enforce no kids come to school sick, etc. If in person is so important to the BOE president make an option for those with special needs.