Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
I wonder where they are getting the 70% from. Can’t be the zoom check-ins. Since they announced the grading policy only single digits have been attending.
Source, please? I don’t believe this is true, but if it is, then those schools need to step up their outreach to students and families. Why would parents and guardians tolerate this? School and learning involves much more than grades and what happens inside of brick and mortar buildings. So many industries have evolved over the last 100 years...it’s unfortunate that we can’t have the same expectations of innovation for learning and teaching.
Just my DCs observation from every class check in DC attends. Last week highest they had was 9 in one class. Lowest was 2. Others in between. Why would DC HS be an outlier?
The check-ins are OPTIONAL. It doesn't mean the kids aren’t working, idiot.
My son rarely does the check-ins because he knows how to learn by himself. He has all As and turns in every assignment on time.
Walter Johnson.
What a nice Walter Johnson parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
Wait, you think 70% of kids participating is GOOD?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
I wonder where they are getting the 70% from. Can’t be the zoom check-ins. Since they announced the grading policy only single digits have been attending.
Source, please? I don’t believe this is true, but if it is, then those schools need to step up their outreach to students and families. Why would parents and guardians tolerate this? School and learning involves much more than grades and what happens inside of brick and mortar buildings. So many industries have evolved over the last 100 years...it’s unfortunate that we can’t have the same expectations of innovation for learning and teaching.
Just my DCs observation from every class check in DC attends. Last week highest they had was 9 in one class. Lowest was 2. Others in between. Why would DC HS be an outlier?
The check-ins are OPTIONAL. It doesn't mean the kids aren’t working, idiot.
My son rarely does the check-ins because he knows how to learn by himself. He has all As and turns in every assignment on time.
Walter Johnson.
Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
I wonder where they are getting the 70% from. Can’t be the zoom check-ins. Since they announced the grading policy only single digits have been attending.
Source, please? I don’t believe this is true, but if it is, then those schools need to step up their outreach to students and families. Why would parents and guardians tolerate this? School and learning involves much more than grades and what happens inside of brick and mortar buildings. So many industries have evolved over the last 100 years...it’s unfortunate that we can’t have the same expectations of innovation for learning and teaching.
Just my DCs observation from every class check in DC attends. Last week highest they had was 9 in one class. Lowest was 2. Others in between. Why would DC HS be an outlier?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
I wonder where they are getting the 70% from. Can’t be the zoom check-ins. Since they announced the grading policy only single digits have been attending.
Source, please? I don’t believe this is true, but if it is, then those schools need to step up their outreach to students and families. Why would parents and guardians tolerate this? School and learning involves much more than grades and what happens inside of brick and mortar buildings. So many industries have evolved over the last 100 years...it’s unfortunate that we can’t have the same expectations of innovation for learning and teaching.
Anonymous wrote:
Oh right, like the liberal media isn't outraged over meat packers getting the disease en masse because they're being forced to go to work during dangerous times. It's a lawsuit waiting to happen if one dies from it. You don't have to prove much in a civil lawsuit. The university may even pay to make it go away. If places of work routinely ignore basic safety advice regarding public health, they could easily be sued for endangering their staff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
I wonder where they are getting the 70% from. Can’t be the zoom check-ins. Since they announced the grading policy only single digits have been attending.
Anonymous wrote:
MCPS reported 70% participation with distance learning. The quality of education should improve when they prepare for the fall, and they are working on it now.
My children and their friends are learning very well with distance learning.
Get with the program, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all universities are closed for the fall. Some are still making plans. Some are having students arrive on campus a few weeks early, and ending the fall semester at Thanksgiving.
Exactly
They'll change their tune. Classes aren't the only thing to worry about. You have high density dorm rooms, and older faculty/staff are more at risk. A single death of a staff person who contracts it from a student will open up the university to massive liability. Wife works at a university. If she contracted the virus from a student and died because the university was stubborn and opened up, I'd sue the pants off of them.
How would you prove where she caught it? What about all of the other workers that have died - should they be suing the pants off of their employers or is your wife more special than them? Do you think your wife is required to work there if she thinks it’s not safe?
agreed. you'll never be able to prove where she got it. I work in workman's compensation and all the covid claims are being denied. no one can prove where they got infected. it could have been work. it could have been the gas pump you used last tuesday. it could have been an errant viral particle you encountered when walking your dog
+1. What a disgusting mindset to think that you could sue ANYONE for contracting a virus. It's almost laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
agreed. you'll never be able to prove where she got it. I work in workman's compensation and all the covid claims are being denied. no one can prove where they got infected. it could have been work. it could have been the gas pump you used last tuesday. it could have been an errant viral particle you encountered when walking your dog
+1. What a disgusting mindset to think that you could sue ANYONE for contracting a virus. It's almost laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all universities are closed for the fall. Some are still making plans. Some are having students arrive on campus a few weeks early, and ending the fall semester at Thanksgiving.
Exactly
They'll change their tune. Classes aren't the only thing to worry about. You have high density dorm rooms, and older faculty/staff are more at risk. A single death of a staff person who contracts it from a student will open up the university to massive liability. Wife works at a university. If she contracted the virus from a student and died because the university was stubborn and opened up, I'd sue the pants off of them.
How would you prove where she caught it? What about all of the other workers that have died - should they be suing the pants off of their employers or is your wife more special than them? Do you think your wife is required to work there if she thinks it’s not safe?
agreed. you'll never be able to prove where she got it. I work in workman's compensation and all the covid claims are being denied. no one can prove where they got infected. it could have been work. it could have been the gas pump you used last tuesday. it could have been an errant viral particle you encountered when walking your dog
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine confessed that she doesn’t want schools to resume regular in-school classes because she won’t have the “excuse” (her words) to work from home. She’s actually hoping schools stay closed.
Teacher living down the street basically said the same thing to me the other day; she enjoys working from home which isn’t something she’s been able to do over the course of her teaching career.
I suspect a lot of these people rallying for schools not to open - or floating this idea as fact - are like friend and nieghbor.
Where are the teachers that love teaching and can’t wait for school to start back normally? This forum makes me sad.