Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friends in Catholic School in VA have been back as normal since late August without incident. Everyone puts on masks and gets on with it.
My kid attends school five days a week at her DCPS EotP, with her regular classroom teacher in the room teaching, without incident. Exactly right, everybody puts on masks and gets on with it. Everybody also gets tested every week. So far, nobody's tested positive and even if somebody did, one class would be shut down for a couple weeks, not the whole school. There are ways and ways to get at least some of the kids back into school safely.
Anonymous wrote:My friends in Catholic School in VA have been back as normal since late August without incident. Everyone puts on masks and gets on with it.
Anonymous wrote:Homeschooling is not the same as distance learning. With distance learning dcps teachers are providing the education. Ours are actually doing a great job of it, despite what seems to be the popular sentiment on this board!
Anonymous wrote:Homeschooling is not the same as distance learning. With distance learning dcps teachers are providing the education. Ours are actually doing a great job of it, despite what seems to be the popular sentiment on this board!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone posted an article in a previous thread that said that 30% of student athletes at Ohio State who were diagnosed with Covid previously, now have permanent heart damage. I can’t find the article myself but if anyone finds it please post.
There is so much we don’t know about COVID. Research and studies are coming out every day.
https://www.q13fox.com/news/ohio-state-study-30-of-student-athletes-have-heart-damage-linked-to-covid-19
Here is a good article that gives some perspective on such reports:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/09/covid-19-heart-pandemic-coronavirus-myocarditis/616420/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.
Thank you. This exactly.
If my asymptotic brings it home and I get it then who takes him to school while I can’t breathe. What if I get long covid. Who is working to support our two person family?
And I’ve seen 3 families in our school go on vacations to hotspots. Because covid can’t get them in their delusional minds. They are also the ones who whine about managing their kids during DL (also pre pandemic so there is that). I don’t want their kid near mine period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.
Thank you. This exactly.
If my asymptotic brings it home and I get it then who takes him to school while I can’t breathe. What if I get long covid. Who is working to support our two person family?
And I’ve seen 3 families in our school go on vacations to hotspots. Because covid can’t get them in their delusional minds. They are also the ones who whine about managing their kids during DL (also pre pandemic so there is that). I don’t want their kid near mine period.
No one forces you to send your kid back into a school building - ever. Homeschooling is an option to anyone in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.
Thank you. This exactly.
If my asymptotic brings it home and I get it then who takes him to school while I can’t breathe. What if I get long covid. Who is working to support our two person family?
And I’ve seen 3 families in our school go on vacations to hotspots. Because covid can’t get them in their delusional minds. They are also the ones who whine about managing their kids during DL (also pre pandemic so there is that). I don’t want their kid near mine period.
Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.
Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone posted an article in a previous thread that said that 30% of student athletes at Ohio State who were diagnosed with Covid previously, now have permanent heart damage. I can’t find the article myself but if anyone finds it please post.
There is so much we don’t know about COVID. Research and studies are coming out every day.
https://www.q13fox.com/news/ohio-state-study-30-of-student-athletes-have-heart-damage-linked-to-covid-19
Anonymous wrote:Does no one understand that by distance learning you are also protecting parents, many of whom are not on a priority list, from covid? I send my kid to school and their exposures automatically become my exposures because even if they don’t show symptoms they bring the virus home. Vaccinating teachers is a good start but what about the parents who the kids come home to? DL is frankly working fine for us and is much less disruptive than the disruption of having a parent die or suffer long term health complications from covid.
In places in the US where schools are open, so is everything else, and covid is rampant in the community. My sense is that the attitude in these places is that folks have given up. That is one approach.