Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
But what is it exactly that anyone can conclude from the data that is at all useful for making decisions? If 10% of the students in a school tested positive, I have no idea whether they caught it at school or the mall, and they are isolating at home.
For MCPS parents’ purposes, it doesn’t matter where they caught it. What matters is that statistically, 2-3 kids *in every class* have an active covid case. That makes it much more difficult to avoid catching covid than when 2-3 out of every hundred kids has an active case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
You know that people can catch COVID more than once?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
But what is it exactly that anyone can conclude from the data that is at all useful for making decisions? If 10% of the students in a school tested positive, I have no idea whether they caught it at school or the mall, and they are isolating at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
But what is it exactly that anyone can conclude from the data that is at all useful for making decisions? If 10% of the students in a school tested positive, I have no idea whether they caught it at school or the mall, and they are isolating at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Strongly disagree here. I am for keeping the schools open but not showing accumulated 5-7 days of data is highly misleading. MCPS started with that and then dropped it. You can decide when to close or switch or not close or not switch ... all that, but be transparent about the data which can be seen by families.
Families can decide if they want to send their kids to school. My kids already have gotten covid so I am not worried, but it hardly means that we hide data and force families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Disagree. Really appreciate that somebody is analyzing these data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Somebody with an agenda to close schools. The figures are constructed in a way to lead to certain conclusions. The fact X percent of students or staff have Covid is neither evidence of school spread or an indication that an individual school is in “chaos.” I’m sure it will stop being updated once cases decrease.
Anonymous wrote:These numbers are very suspiciously low. The numbers listed for my school could represent just one of my classes, not the whole school.
Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is doing this independently! Check it ou
https://sites.google.com/view/mcpsactivecovidcases/home
This should have been done by MCPS instead of trying to hide the accumulated infection rate in last 10 days.
100%
There's no excuse for the lack of transparency
There’s the rationale - MCPS doesn’t want transparency. The numbers will show a school system falling apart.
Why is the Board of Education so silent?