Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they get paid, why aren’t they teaching? It takes little time to put lessons up. So many public school districts are doing it nationwide. MCPS is abysmal and embarrassing
Little time to put up lessons? YOU ARE AN IDIOT.
My nieces and nephews online classes thru zoom and you tube started on Monday. They started preparing back in February. Their teachers give video lessons on math with a print out recommended (but not needed) to follow along. Then they go to online work and quizzes and submit them back to their math teacher each day. She emailed them back emails that were personable and encouraging. Literacy is based on science, SS, or fiction with writing and repeat backs sent back to their teachers. They are in 3rd and 5th. Not sure what other grades are like.
So, yes this can easily happen for ES teachers who teach the same 25 kids every day. They can upload a 1 hour video lesson and link up supportive work. It is very easy to post a you tube video and link it. I mean an 8 yr old knows how to do that.
Providing links to lessons that others have spent hours, days, months crafting is not, in my book, "putting up lessons". Sure adding a link to someone else's work is easy peasy, but providing and creating that ORIGINAL content, that takes time.
Anonymous wrote:Again, I don't think anyone (except) one troll is suggesting teachers not be paid.
What people ARE suggesting is that they work, which would mean making an uncomfortable and possibly clumsy transition to online learning. That is still better than the alternative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they get paid, why aren’t they teaching? It takes little time to put lessons up. So many public school districts are doing it nationwide. MCPS is abysmal and embarrassing
Little time to put up lessons? YOU ARE AN IDIOT.
My nieces and nephews online classes thru zoom and you tube started on Monday. They started preparing back in February. Their teachers give video lessons on math with a print out recommended (but not needed) to follow along. Then they go to online work and quizzes and submit them back to their math teacher each day. She emailed them back emails that were personable and encouraging. Literacy is based on science, SS, or fiction with writing and repeat backs sent back to their teachers. They are in 3rd and 5th. Not sure what other grades are like.
So, yes this can easily happen for ES teachers who teach the same 25 kids every day. They can upload a 1 hour video lesson and link up supportive work. It is very easy to post a you tube video and link it. I mean an 8 yr old knows how to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why has China been prepared to transition to online learning and we are not?
Why is Germany ordering 10,000 additional ventilators and we haven't?
Why do you pay $700 for an emergency room visit but they decided not to use any of that profit for extra mask?
This country has generated so much wealth for a few and they put not even a small effort into safeguards for society. Not even our children education.
We pay very high property tax and we get kids on emergency with no work to do. No teacher support. No plan for their future.
We have been let down in a colossal way.
We don't, actually. Or rather, you may pay a lot in property taxes, but that's because your property has a high property value. The property tax rates in Montgomery County are not high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they get paid, why aren’t they teaching? It takes little time to put lessons up. So many public school districts are doing it nationwide. MCPS is abysmal and embarrassing
Little time to put up lessons? YOU ARE AN IDIOT.
Anonymous wrote:If they get paid, why aren’t they teaching? It takes little time to put lessons up. So many public school districts are doing it nationwide. MCPS is abysmal and embarrassing
Anonymous wrote:Yes, they get paid and don't have to do any work. We were told not to contact teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I don't think anyone (except) one troll is suggesting teachers not be paid.
What people ARE suggesting is that they work, which would mean making an uncomfortable and possibly clumsy transition to online learning. That is still better than the alternative.
We WANT to work, but we need to be trained in how to teach online. It’s not as simple as Zoom on your laptop in your living room. We also need to get computers to teachers who also have children at home but only one device. And figure out how to manage childcare for teachers whose children are too young to not interrupt.
This is where MCPS needs to show some leadership. We have a week and a half left in which MCPS could be training teachers and distributing Chromebooks (maybe at the same locations currently hosting free food pickup).
Easy to type out on DCUM, while you're sitting comfortable at home.
Not so easy to actually do.
I love teachers, but this kind of attitude is what drives me crazy about educators in MoCo. No, it's not easy to move to online, which is why a lot of us (public and private sector folks) started working on this problem in February. We didn't wait until the governor declared an emergency to make plans and develop systems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What you don’t realize is that a teacher can’t apply for unemployment to makeup for that missing income. We know several two teacher families that work 60-80 weeks at restaurants and bars or warehouses all summer to make ends meet. If they lose that income, it wouldn’t matter that they got paid to stay home now because they won’t be paid for a summer session that replaces the spring.
There would have to be emergency funding to pay teachers for a make-up summer session.
Are you sure?
I remember working days one summer that cut into my summer job because we were told that we had already been paid for them during the snow days. Fair enough, except I left my summer employer short handed and missed days of that pay check.
I think that MCPS does not want teachers working now, and are instead doing work generated by central office, so that they can make us work over the summer. I can be wrong, but I think that is why they are calling in ¨emergency leave.¨ --- by the way, I know many teachers who are still trying to instruct students using videos, especially AP teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What you don’t realize is that a teacher can’t apply for unemployment to makeup for that missing income. We know several two teacher families that work 60-80 weeks at restaurants and bars or warehouses all summer to make ends meet. If they lose that income, it wouldn’t matter that they got paid to stay home now because they won’t be paid for a summer session that replaces the spring.
There would have to be emergency funding to pay teachers for a make-up summer session.
Are you sure?
I remember working days one summer that cut into my summer job because we were told that we had already been paid for them during the snow days. Fair enough, except I left my summer employer short handed and missed days of that pay check.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What you don’t realize is that a teacher can’t apply for unemployment to makeup for that missing income. We know several two teacher families that work 60-80 weeks at restaurants and bars or warehouses all summer to make ends meet. If they lose that income, it wouldn’t matter that they got paid to stay home now because they won’t be paid for a summer session that replaces the spring.
There would have to be emergency funding to pay teachers for a make-up summer session.