Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP hit the nail on the head: it is about privacy and security. ZOOM is not approved and will not be approved by FCPS because it does not protect students’ privacy. This is directly from the mouth of Maribeth Luftglass, the assistant superintendent for IT at FCPS. Principals asked specifically about using it, and this is the reason why.
Teachers are being trained to use Blackboard Collaborate which they can then use with their students. It’s not as fabulous as ZOOM, but it’s secure.
When friends ask why FCPS isn’t using ZOOM, please explain that it’s about security. It’s not about equity, because there is a tool for videoconferencing.
-a principal
Dear Principal,
I run the IT department for a federal agency. We use Zoom. It's plenty secure for PII.
So when my friends ask, I tell them it's NOT about security, because it isn't.
If you believe it is, pls link to a reputable trade study that says why it is. Heck, even something from IEEE, slashdot or Zimmerman's blog would do.
Signed - a guy that manages secure IT systems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoom is not approved for instruction in FCPS. Any FCPS teacher using it faces a reprimand.
Could you PLEASE lay off until the end of the week? FCPS has 190,000 students. They are doing the best that they can. Many teachers didn’t even have their *laptops* until principals allowed them back into the building for literally 10 minutes today. Buildings have been ordered closed. Instructional devices provided 2 weeks’ worth of work on Blackboard. Have you done it all? And if your child misses classmates so much, why don’t YOU organize a Zoom play date among children?
FCPS is such a piece of shit. Zoom is offering its services FREE to schools, it's the best thing out there, and FCPS administration is saying no?
No, I'm not laying off. It's already been two weeks. Literally every one else I know in other parts of the country has received SOMETHING from their schools. I don't care that it's 190,000 students. Learn how to scale up. This is a terrible place to live, we're moving as soon as feasible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On the note of laptops for every kid, in almost all normal circumstances, the elementary kids should not be 1:1 with laptops.
Those should be an occassional activity, not a primary means of teaching.
That is why many of us voted against the meals tax. Early elementary students should not be looking at a screen all day. It is bad for their development.
Even in this quarantine situation, traditional paper work is better than laptops. I really hope fcps does not try to get 1:1 laptops for the little ones.
I teach third grade. We have no Chromebooks. I have 5 laptops in the classroom for 23 third graders. Each classroom has 5 computers (one classroom has 5 desktops). The grade level shares 2 mobile lab carts that hold 16 hand me down laptops (if they are available and not pulled for testing or the Global Awareness Project). That’s 62 computers (57 laptops) for approximately 145 students.
And that is how it should be.
Early elementsry kids should not be getting their education from compjters as a primary tool.
Computers should be used only occassionally in 4th grade.and below.
LOL so what’s your plan for <3rd grade kids for the next 3 months?
Playing
Cooking
Reading books
Drawing
Journaling
Learning cursive
Building legos
Talking together
Hobbies
Crafts
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At my daugther's elementary school, there are not enough laptops to go around. And, we are in one of the wealthier parts of Fairfax. There have been several times she has had to take a test on paper and then transfer it online once a laptop is available.
And, even when they are able to hand them out, you have make sure the student/parent knows how to log in, be able to access blackboard, google classroom, etc.
But in your wealthier school, and really almost all of Fairfax County, nearly every family has multiple devices at home and do not need school supplied laptops.
I bet you would be unable to name a single family in your school that does not have a laptop, tablets, desktops or smart phones.
DP — Our Mac is on its last leg. The graphic card is dying, and the interface doesn’t always show the entire screen. We have work laptops, and cell phones for adults only. Our upper ES kids do not have personal devices.
What do they do when school is in session? Homework often involves a computer.
You can hand off your cell phone to your kid so they can download and print the homework assignments, or you can print them for them if you don't let them touch your phones.
Anonymous wrote:At my daugther's elementary school, there are not enough laptops to go around. And, we are in one of the wealthier parts of Fairfax. There have been several times she has had to take a test on paper and then transfer it online once a laptop is available.
And, even when they are able to hand them out, you have make sure the student/parent knows how to log in, be able to access blackboard, google classroom, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be fine.
Hand out computers. Really?? Get a grip.
Our school sent out a technology survey and issued chrome books to students who needed them. We have 3 chrome books now for our 3 elementary school children, which is great because then we can use our own laptops for our own work. We just signed waivers saying we would return it, like checking out a library book. Why should chromebooks and other computers just sit in classrooms and libraries unused? It's been so helpful because they are doing everything online now.
I assume this is not for an FCPS school?
Nope, it's not. Just saying it can be done.
EXACTLY!!!
Fairfax county has sent out the laptop surveys.
Our middle school did it oast week when they were still in session.
Our elementary school did it this week, and let us know that computer work will be for 3rd grade and up
The little kids will get printed work (or perhaps emailed packets, not sure)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoom is not approved for instruction in FCPS. Any FCPS teacher using it faces a reprimand.
Could you PLEASE lay off until the end of the week? FCPS has 190,000 students. They are doing the best that they can. Many teachers didn’t even have their *laptops* until principals allowed them back into the building for literally 10 minutes today. Buildings have been ordered closed. Instructional devices provided 2 weeks’ worth of work on Blackboard. Have you done it all? And if your child misses classmates so much, why don’t YOU organize a Zoom play date among children?
FCPS is such a piece of shit. Zoom is offering its services FREE to schools, it's the best thing out there, and FCPS administration is saying no?
No, I'm not laying off. It's already been two weeks. Literally every one else I know in other parts of the country has received SOMETHING from their schools. I don't care that it's 190,000 students. Learn how to scale up. This is a terrible place to live, we're moving as soon as feasible.
Are you at home with elementary aged kids? I'm guessing yes.
My guess is a kindergartner, a preschool younger sibling, and just maybe, a 5 to 9 year old boy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP hit the nail on the head: it is about privacy and security. ZOOM is not approved and will not be approved by FCPS because it does not protect students’ privacy. This is directly from the mouth of Maribeth Luftglass, the assistant superintendent for IT at FCPS. Principals asked specifically about using it, and this is the reason why.
Teachers are being trained to use Blackboard Collaborate which they can then use with their students. It’s not as fabulous as ZOOM, but it’s secure.
When friends ask why FCPS isn’t using ZOOM, please explain that it’s about security. It’s not about equity, because there is a tool for videoconferencing.
-a principal
Dear Principal,
I run the IT department for a federal agency. We use Zoom. It's plenty secure for PII.
So when my friends ask, I tell them it's NOT about security, because it isn't.
If you believe it is, pls link to a reputable trade study that says why it is. Heck, even something from IEEE, slashdot or Zimmerman's blog would do.
Signed - a guy that manages secure IT systems.
Anonymous wrote:PP hit the nail on the head: it is about privacy and security. ZOOM is not approved and will not be approved by FCPS because it does not protect students’ privacy. This is directly from the mouth of Maribeth Luftglass, the assistant superintendent for IT at FCPS. Principals asked specifically about using it, and this is the reason why.
Teachers are being trained to use Blackboard Collaborate which they can then use with their students. It’s not as fabulous as ZOOM, but it’s secure.
When friends ask why FCPS isn’t using ZOOM, please explain that it’s about security. It’s not about equity, because there is a tool for videoconferencing.
-a principal
They're doing the exact same thing FCPS is. Handing you generic review work to keep your kids busy. The only difference is the teachers are providing it instead of the county higher ups. The only reason APS has been able to start communicating more virtually with their students is b/c they were ALREADY one to one and had ALREADY addressed the lack of tech and internet in their county as part of their day to day instruction prior to schools closing. But, then, when you have 28,000 students instead of A HUNDRED AND EIGHTY THOUSAND students, it's a lot easier to establish equity in that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At my daugther's elementary school, there are not enough laptops to go around. And, we are in one of the wealthier parts of Fairfax. There have been several times she has had to take a test on paper and then transfer it online once a laptop is available.
And, even when they are able to hand them out, you have make sure the student/parent knows how to log in, be able to access blackboard, google classroom, etc.
But in your wealthier school, and really almost all of Fairfax County, nearly every family has multiple devices at home and do not need school supplied laptops.
I bet you would be unable to name a single family in your school that does not have a laptop, tablets, desktops or smart phones.
DP — Our Mac is on its last leg. The graphic card is dying, and the interface doesn’t always show the entire screen. We have work laptops, and cell phones for adults only. Our upper ES kids do not have personal devices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At my daugther's elementary school, there are not enough laptops to go around. And, we are in one of the wealthier parts of Fairfax. There have been several times she has had to take a test on paper and then transfer it online once a laptop is available.
And, even when they are able to hand them out, you have make sure the student/parent knows how to log in, be able to access blackboard, google classroom, etc.
But in your wealthier school, and really almost all of Fairfax County, nearly every family has multiple devices at home and do not need school supplied laptops.
I bet you would be unable to name a single family in your school that does not have a laptop, tablets, desktops or smart phones.
DP — Our Mac is on its last leg. The graphic card is dying, and the interface doesn’t always show the entire screen. We have work laptops, and cell phones for adults only. Our upper ES kids do not have personal devices.