Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
That would be a huge overreaction by parents to a temporary situation.
Anonymous wrote:Parents are scared too, OP. There is no playbook for this. It doesn't help that we're getting absolutely ZERO guidance from the county in the way of metrics. Unfortunately, the loudest groups are the parents who insist everyone must go back and teachers be damned, and the teachers who insist that nothing is safe and parents are sending them to their deaths. I think most parents and teachers are more in the middle, and more tempered voices are being drowned out. My personal view is that the only way to see how it will go is to try - even if that means starting small the way some schools are doing and bringing a grade or two back at a time. Give schools a chance to test their plans. Give kids a chance to show they can adapt to less social contact, more computers, more rules. Enforce the hell out of those rules. Stay cautious, but move forward. Otherwise it's all speculation and we'll never get out of this.
Anonymous wrote:Parents are scared too, OP. There is no playbook for this. It doesn't help that we're getting absolutely ZERO guidance from the county in the way of metrics. Unfortunately, the loudest groups are the parents who insist everyone must go back and teachers be damned, and the teachers who insist that nothing is safe and parents are sending them to their deaths. I think most parents and teachers are more in the middle, and more tempered voices are being drowned out. My personal view is that the only way to see how it will go is to try - even if that means starting small the way some schools are doing and bringing a grade or two back at a time. Give schools a chance to test their plans. Give kids a chance to show they can adapt to less social contact, more computers, more rules. Enforce the hell out of those rules. Stay cautious, but move forward. Otherwise it's all speculation and we'll never get out of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
That would be a huge overreaction by parents to a temporary situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Our school suddenly has wait lists for most grades from all the parents switching from publics, but ok.
Our school is doing DL, but everyone I know is thrilled with how they've handled it and I expect that many will donate more than usual this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
To be clear - the catastrophe here is the pandemic. If schools go under, it is because of the pandemic - not because of teachers, administrators, or county leaders.
The catastrophe is the teachers putting their histrionics ahead of all else and abandoning their students while apparently still expecting to get paid. Until this I had the utmost respect for teachers and supported them financially and emotionally whenever possible. No more. Thanks for nothing, private school teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone is scared. Teachers are not different than anyone else and I’m so tired of hearing about how THEY feel as if it trumps every other working member of society.
I don't think it's meant to trump anyone else, but just as a response to people demanding they return to work. I'm a lawyer and no one is demanding that I return to work (that I do my work, yes, but not that I do it in person). It's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teacher here who resents any private school teacher who says they speak for all of us. I am appropriately apprehensive but prefer to teach in person. I was disappointed when my school reversed course and chose to do everything virtually. [/quote}
I am a parochial school teacher who agrees with "appropriately apprehensive" entirely. We are going back in person and I am pleased. And yes, I am in a "high risk" group. But I have studied and in fact given input to our plan, and above all, believe the students need to be in school if we can do it with appropriate precautions - and we are. All the teachers I know agree with this basic stance. I am not sure what the motivation is for all this public hand-wringing, but please don't think it represents all teachers. There are lots and lots of us that are happy to get back to work and are quiet and just get on with our jobs.
Really? Maybe if you think about it for a little bit it will come to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
I’m a teacher and you’re exactly right. I am planning to update my license this year (I let it lapse when I moved to private a while back) because I truly do not expect the small privates to survive. Parents aren’t going to pay for this for another year and I can’t really blame them.
This is the truth. I learned today my daughter's private Maryland high school will not be having sports this fall, amongst other things. She is a VB player going into her senior year (with college athletic aspirations). We are currently considering other options...stay in private school for 1 class and pay $$$$ or transfer to our local public (which she can still enroll in virtual) and play sports (we are across PA line). There's no point in staying.
So sorry PP. I have two at a Maryland private school as well. I think we were all holding out hope that HS sports would happen this fall for private schools, maybe with parents providing transportation. As you say, with virtual learning and no in person activities on the horizon, we might as well have sent them to public school this year and saved money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Our school suddenly has wait lists for most grades from all the parents switching from publics, but ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Our school suddenly has wait lists for most grades from all the parents switching from publics, but ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Our school suddenly has wait lists for most grades from all the parents switching from publics, but ok.
Anonymous wrote:Private school teacher here who resents any private school teacher who says they speak for all of us. I am appropriately apprehensive but prefer to teach in person. I was disappointed when my school reversed course and chose to do everything virtually. [/quote}
I am a parochial school teacher who agrees with "appropriately apprehensive" entirely. We are going back in person and I am pleased. And yes, I am in a "high risk" group. But I have studied and in fact given input to our plan, and above all, believe the students need to be in school if we can do it with appropriate precautions - and we are. All the teachers I know agree with this basic stance. I am not sure what the motivation is for all this public hand-wringing, but please don't think it represents all teachers. There are lots and lots of us that are happy to get back to work and are quiet and just get on with our jobs.