Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame:
- the union
- the mayor
- that worthless Ferebee
- the teachers themselves
don't forget our worthless city council.
I feel truly blessed to not have parents like this. I'm on maternity leave so my kids had to to virtual for these last 4 weeks but even when we were virtual last year I cannot imagine them blaming me like this.
As if I have the power to change the districts mind. The WTU contract has been expired for years, IMPACT is still very much intact, and DCPS still doesn't support it's teachers. Those are things 99% of teachers really care about. If we are so powerful even after 10 years why hasn't it changed?
What makes the pandemic so special that you all really think the WTU has that much power? We lost our president a while ago, if we were 'strong' DCPS could have easily said, 'Ok last 6 weeks IPL for everyone.'
But we all must blame someone. A public school teacher seems like an easy target. Women love to tear each other down after all.
Teachers refused to show up for work. They effectively went on an illegal strike. Even as daycares, private schools and public schools almost everywhere else were open. This isn't that complicated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame:
- the union
- the mayor
- that worthless Ferebee
- the teachers themselves
don't forget our worthless city council.
I feel truly blessed to not have parents like this. I'm on maternity leave so my kids had to to virtual for these last 4 weeks but even when we were virtual last year I cannot imagine them blaming me like this.
As if I have the power to change the districts mind. The WTU contract has been expired for years, IMPACT is still very much intact, and DCPS still doesn't support it's teachers. Those are things 99% of teachers really care about. If we are so powerful even after 10 years why hasn't it changed?
What makes the pandemic so special that you all really think the WTU has that much power? We lost our president a while ago, if we were 'strong' DCPS could have easily said, 'Ok last 6 weeks IPL for everyone.'
But we all must blame someone. A public school teacher seems like an easy target. Women love to tear each other down after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers unions have permanently alienated a good share of parents in DC. A lot of them will never forgive WTU for what it did to their families during the pandemic.
But no one really cares about white parents.
Who are you?! I’m firmly convinced you’re a troll. White parents are not excluded at all in DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame:
- the union
- the mayor
- that worthless Ferebee
- the teachers themselves
don't forget our worthless city council.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers unions have permanently alienated a good share of parents in DC. A lot of them will never forgive WTU for what it did to their families during the pandemic.
But no one really cares about white parents.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers unions have permanently alienated a good share of parents in DC. A lot of them will never forgive WTU for what it did to their families during the pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:I think no one does IRL, just anonymous trolls.
Anonymous wrote:I blame:
- the union
- the mayor
- that worthless Ferebee
- the teachers themselves
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I am a WTU member in the union dropped the ball in many respects. If you look at the Chicago teachers union they’ve been able to do both sides of the issue. They fought to make sure their union members were brought back to school in a safe manner. They’ve also been incredibly engage in the community making sure that community members and parents of their students get vaccines. The only thing a WTU did was say we’re not opening. I don’t disagree with it. But they could’ve done a lot more to support the community which would’ve gone along way.
Chicago's coronavirus rates were far, far higher than DC's and Chicago's schools are in much, much worse shape than ours. And yet they opened, and we didn't. Inexcusable.
I’ve been teaching in a dcps school since February
A small fraction of kids going to school twice a week doesnt count as open. DC is dead last in the country by a lot when it comes to getting kids back in school.
Our whole staff is teaching full classrooms every day except Weds AMA. Actually don’t bc y’all are bad people so I don’t really want to talk to you and just enjoy reading this to laugh.
Laughing because kids aren’t in school. What a strange thing for a teacher to say.
Anonymous wrote:Yes I blame the union.
DC has a very small % of students back. The primary reason for that, even at this very late stage, is the Union argued for things completely unrelated to safety, but rather related to job security and protecting underperformers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I am a WTU member in the union dropped the ball in many respects. If you look at the Chicago teachers union they’ve been able to do both sides of the issue. They fought to make sure their union members were brought back to school in a safe manner. They’ve also been incredibly engage in the community making sure that community members and parents of their students get vaccines. The only thing a WTU did was say we’re not opening. I don’t disagree with it. But they could’ve done a lot more to support the community which would’ve gone along way.
Chicago's coronavirus rates were far, far higher than DC's and Chicago's schools are in much, much worse shape than ours. And yet they opened, and we didn't. Inexcusable.
I’ve been teaching in a dcps school since February
A small fraction of kids going to school twice a week doesnt count as open. DC is dead last in the country by a lot when it comes to getting kids back in school.
Our whole staff is teaching full classrooms every day except Weds AMA. Actually don’t bc y’all are bad people so I don’t really want to talk to you and just enjoy reading this to laugh.
Laughing because kids aren’t in school. What a strange thing for a teacher to say.