Anonymous wrote:There are kids in my block who are going back to their home country (Guatemala). The single parent does not speak English. They live in one bedroom of a rowhouse. I’m sure he hasn’t re-enrolled them bc their plan is to go back home. But the date they are leaving keeps shifting. I worry about those kids and others like them. What will become of them?
Anonymous wrote:It is a little surreal to read all these posts acting like 20,000 kids missing from school is no big deal. And how many more are registered and never bother with distance learning?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember relisha Rudd. Remember the case of the 4 kids whose Mentally ill mom killed them. School also is a social service, a way to track these kids and hopefully keep them safe, alive. I’m a dem but I believe schools must open.
This is a good point. Cases of serious child abuse have skyrocketed in the ER. These are kids that could have been helped with intervention by teachers and school counselors but now they're slipping through the cracks until it's too late.
Anonymous wrote:It is a little surreal to read all these posts acting like 20,000 kids missing from school is no big deal. And how many more are registered and never bother with distance learning?
Anonymous wrote:Remember relisha Rudd. Remember the case of the 4 kids whose Mentally ill mom killed them. School also is a social service, a way to track these kids and hopefully keep them safe, alive. I’m a dem but I believe schools must open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Headline is a little misleading. Last year, they had 89k enrolled by this point. This year they have 77k. So, the difference is closer to 12k.
If this board is any indication, these kids are out of school; they just moved to the suburbs/went private/are being home schooled.
I thought it was interesting that they said the under enrollment does not significantly vary by ward.
Yes, and of the 12,000, how much of this is parents who enrolled but didn't finish the paperwork? There aren't 12,000 missing students and the Wash Post/Perry Stein should be clearer on which portion are really kids who aren't in school or kids who are just missing a part of their paperwork since DC requires re-enrollment and proving residency every year.
Anonymous wrote:I suspect a lot of these kids are never coming back, even when schools reopen. Once they get in the habit of not attending school, that habit is going to be hard to break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Montgomery County has lower enrollment as well. The solution to the disease is probably not to "open school". It is to have leadership in our country who will LEAD. We still do not have a national plan for reopening schools, businesses, etc. I agree that schools should be open, but instead of our nation planning for the Fall 2020 reopening back in the Spring, people spent time arguing over whether or not to wear a mask. So, the issue here is not to open schools. Anybody can do that. The issue is opening schools and keeping them open. Where is the plan for that? Schools not being open is a symptom of a larger problem that our nation faces.
Hardly anyone in DC has coronavirus. This is all for nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My aunt works for a poor county in Maryland. 1/3 of elementary students received no instruction in the spring. This isn’t surprising and is a national emergency. People don’t care because it’s immigrants and POC.
This
Anonymous wrote:My aunt works for a poor county in Maryland. 1/3 of elementary students received no instruction in the spring. This isn’t surprising and is a national emergency. People don’t care because it’s immigrants and POC.
Anonymous wrote:Headline is a little misleading. Last year, they had 89k enrolled by this point. This year they have 77k. So, the difference is closer to 12k.
If this board is any indication, these kids are out of school; they just moved to the suburbs/went private/are being home schooled.
I thought it was interesting that they said the under enrollment does not significantly vary by ward.