Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our country needs to stop bending over backwards begging families to send their kids to free schools. If they are absent for no real reason (like most of my students), they should unenroll them. In order to return to school, parents need to actually come to school to talk to admin and teachers about the expectations. The vast majority of students at my school scoring below grade level on assessments year after year are chronically absent.
+100. Just make real consequences for this behavior that impact parents and the nonsense will stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher last week I got Covid from a student who was sent with a runny nose. I got a fever and was miserable and missed 2 days of school. Then my assistant got it- 3 days off with a fever. Yesterday the teacher next door to me got it and will miss at least 2 days.
So now of course we don’t have subs and a few short weeks into the school year, we are all exhausted and splitting classes.
So FCPS touting send kids to school with fever free symptoms is going to run their workforce into the ground and it is already running on fumes.
I am not keeping my child home every time he has a runny nose. He has seasonal allergies that start as seasons change and last about a month. He has had them since he was a baby. We were so happy when we could give him toddler allergy medicine because the cough, from post nasal drip, and runny nose finally cleared up for long periods of time. It is the same now and he is 12.
I am not buying a ton of COVID testing kits to check every day if this is a cold or allergies because that would be cost prohibitive. He has a runny nose for almost 6 weeks straight when the seasons change. If you want to pay for 42 COVID tests please let me know. It sucks but that is what it is. I am sure that the runny nose is sometimes a cold and maybe even COVID. If he is lethargic or coughing a bunch or complains of a headache to go with his sniffles, I will keep him home.
I promise I keep him home if he has a fever, stomach ache, vomit, diarrhea or he tells us that he is feeling off. He is not a kid who skivs off school so we trust him when he says something feels off. It has always turned into one of the above listed issues so we are ok with his staying home.
Schools would go ape if parents kept their kid home for every runny nose because of the number of days that they would miss.
I do think it is irresponsible to send a kid with a fever, stomach issues, or diarrhea and I know parents do that. I don’t think sending kids to school with runny noses or an occasional cough is out of place or wrong.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher last week I got Covid from a student who was sent with a runny nose. I got a fever and was miserable and missed 2 days of school. Then my assistant got it- 3 days off with a fever. Yesterday the teacher next door to me got it and will miss at least 2 days.
So now of course we don’t have subs and a few short weeks into the school year, we are all exhausted and splitting classes.
So FCPS touting send kids to school with fever free symptoms is going to run their workforce into the ground and it is already running on fumes.
Anonymous wrote:Our country needs to stop bending over backwards begging families to send their kids to free schools. If they are absent for no real reason (like most of my students), they should unenroll them. In order to return to school, parents need to actually come to school to talk to admin and teachers about the expectations. The vast majority of students at my school scoring below grade level on assessments year after year are chronically absent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher last week I got Covid from a student who was sent with a runny nose. I got a fever and was miserable and missed 2 days of school. Then my assistant got it- 3 days off with a fever. Yesterday the teacher next door to me got it and will miss at least 2 days.
So now of course we don’t have subs and a few short weeks into the school year, we are all exhausted and splitting classes.
So FCPS touting send kids to school with fever free symptoms is going to run their workforce into the ground and it is already running on fumes.
I am a parent and I support you. The principals need to listen to the teachers (and common sense). It's so short-sighted to pressure sick kids to attend school, because then everyone starts getting sick, and the next thing is, schools will shut down because all the staff are sick.
Are the administrators getting bonuses for increasing attendance? Why aren't any of them standing up and saying, "we want all kids to attend every day, but we also know as professional educators that pushing sick kids to attend school will ultimately lead to even more absenteeism and disrupt learning."
Anonymous wrote:I can see how if you are from a foreign country, and it costs a lot to travel overseas, you'd want to get your money's worth and go for like a month so that your kids can be immersed in the culture and language, and spend time with relatives they rarely get to see. That seems reasonable and like it would also be educational and contribute to social-emotional learning!
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher last week I got Covid from a student who was sent with a runny nose. I got a fever and was miserable and missed 2 days of school. Then my assistant got it- 3 days off with a fever. Yesterday the teacher next door to me got it and will miss at least 2 days.
So now of course we don’t have subs and a few short weeks into the school year, we are all exhausted and splitting classes.
So FCPS touting send kids to school with fever free symptoms is going to run their workforce into the ground and it is already running on fumes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if the school nurse there (a health department employee) has been consulted on any of these measures. Doubtful.
FCPS has pretty clearly said attendance policies for illness are back to pre-pandemic. The fact that some people on DCUM cannot get used to that idea doesn't change it.
Precovid kids still aren’t supposed to come to school when sick, and some children are going to miss due to chronic illness or other issues. Here are all the current reasons your child should stay home: severe coughing, pink eye, diarrhea, vomiting, fever, rash/fever, strep.
Agree this is misplaced. My children have had low level gunk since the beginning of September and we haven’t missed a day, but we would if we had any of the above symptoms.
Disagree. Yes, kids get sick and should stay home and yes, kids are getting sick more and for longer after covid.
But the big problem is parents who have decided that school is optional and have passed that idea on to their kids. It's not a low SES idea either, it's across all SES. It's all over this forum, everywhere. And it harms kids to miss school.
There is data showing that it hurts struggling children, but is there data showing that it hurts high achievers? My kid is in middle school and we're fine with them sleeping in on occasion or leaving early. They do great in school, sit down with khan academy when they don't get a concept in math, read a ton
No, at least not at the secondary level.
That's what you're telling yourself...
Please cite the evidence that it harms high achieving children at the secondary level, then.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher last week I got Covid from a student who was sent with a runny nose. I got a fever and was miserable and missed 2 days of school. Then my assistant got it- 3 days off with a fever. Yesterday the teacher next door to me got it and will miss at least 2 days.
So now of course we don’t have subs and a few short weeks into the school year, we are all exhausted and splitting classes.
So FCPS touting send kids to school with fever free symptoms is going to run their workforce into the ground and it is already running on fumes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if the school nurse there (a health department employee) has been consulted on any of these measures. Doubtful.
FCPS has pretty clearly said attendance policies for illness are back to pre-pandemic. The fact that some people on DCUM cannot get used to that idea doesn't change it.
Precovid kids still aren’t supposed to come to school when sick, and some children are going to miss due to chronic illness or other issues. Here are all the current reasons your child should stay home: severe coughing, pink eye, diarrhea, vomiting, fever, rash/fever, strep.
Agree this is misplaced. My children have had low level gunk since the beginning of September and we haven’t missed a day, but we would if we had any of the above symptoms.
Disagree. Yes, kids get sick and should stay home and yes, kids are getting sick more and for longer after covid.
But the big problem is parents who have decided that school is optional and have passed that idea on to their kids. It's not a low SES idea either, it's across all SES. It's all over this forum, everywhere. And it harms kids to miss school.
There is data showing that it hurts struggling children, but is there data showing that it hurts high achievers? My kid is in middle school and we're fine with them sleeping in on occasion or leaving early. They do great in school, sit down with khan academy when they don't get a concept in math, read a ton
No, at least not at the secondary level.
That's what you're telling yourself...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid is considered chronically absent if they miss 15 days of school— excused and unexcused absences count towards the 15 days. The percentage of chronically absent students plays into school accreditation. That’s the real reason why FCPS cares.
It's 18 days or 10% of the school year. That's only two days per month.
Only?!
In my case it was a full week of diarrhea, vomiting and malaise. So that’s 5 days and that happened twice. Then a couple other days including strep throat and pink eye.
Maybe they need to be disinfecting the schools? My daycare kids aren’t sick as much.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in a similar school and am very upset about it. It resulted in vomiting kids coming to school when they were pressured to come. My kids got sick over and over. And then we missed even more school. After 10 days the principal made us meet with him. Missing just 2 days a month gets you to 18 days absent.
The principal straight up told me to send my kids to school when they were sick and I could pick them up at 10am after count is over.