Anonymous wrote:We are suing the school and they have settled to pay for in person private school because of our iep
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Fear and irrationality.
So true. Private and Catholic schools opened for in-person teaching and have had no problems.
We’ve been through this a million times :
What ONE school can do is different than a district having to run MANY schools with, in Loudoun, 88,000 students. It’s not even a close comparison in terms of logistics, resources, plans, needs of disparate student groups, etc.
Okay, so why can’t the schools in Loudoun that have had zero or one cases total continue? There were many.
Anonymous wrote:We are suing the school and they have settled to pay for in person private school because of our iep
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Fear and irrationality.
So true. Private and Catholic schools opened for in-person teaching and have had no problems.
We’ve been through this a million times :
What ONE school can do is different than a district having to run MANY schools with, in Loudoun, 88,000 students. It’s not even a close comparison in terms of logistics, resources, plans, needs of disparate student groups, etc.
Except a lot of those schools went to virtual after Thanksgiving.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Fear and irrationality.
So true. Private and Catholic schools opened for in-person teaching and have had no problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Fear and irrationality.
So true. Private and Catholic schools opened for in-person teaching and have had no problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Fear and irrationality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Well it’s clear science or common sense have no bearing on return to school either. So what exactly IS driving all these decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
It's clear some of you were never told no as a child. What you desire has no bearing on anything.
Anonymous wrote:^^^Okay, PP. So do the teachers you know, for the most part expect school to reopen 5 days in the Fall of 2021? Because if most teachers want it, and most parents want it, then I think it has a good chance of happening. If there is loud dissention from either group, I'm less confident.
Anonymous wrote:The board still has to debate and vote which metrics they are using to return to hybrid. It’s coming at the meeting next Tuesday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean secondary teachers don’t have to go in starting Jan. 4? Or is that happening regardless?
All schools are closed for all students and teachers until the two metrics go back down below the established thresholds for five consecutive days. So the answer is really, it depends, although highly unlikely.
Actually, I need to correct my post... until at least one of the two metrics goes down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean secondary teachers don’t have to go in starting Jan. 4? Or is that happening regardless?
All schools are closed for all students and teachers until the two metrics go back down below the established thresholds for five consecutive days. So the answer is really, it depends, although highly unlikely.