Anonymous wrote:I love this new argument that teachers are so busy that they do not have 10 minutes to allocate to basic adult functioning.
"WHEN COULD I DO THAT?" she typed into the internet. "When could I possibly make time to do anything online?!" she added before hitting submit.
She was lucky that she had scheduled herself 15 minutes for a bath on Wednesday, although this did mean that she needed to be fed by IV drip for the day. "The sacrifice is truly worth the plummeting test scores," she thought.
Anonymous wrote:All childcare workers and teachers have absolutely NOT been eligible since 2/1. I think they were made eligible around early March. My children attend a charter and several of their teachers just got their second shots this week, for which I am exceptionally grateful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't opting out and if they are working they don't have time to search for a spot.
It's ... just not that time-consuming. I'm in-person and got a spot back in February when the process was a total cluster, as did many of my colleagues.
You go t a spot because DCPS helped you. There were designated sites for teachers. Term 4 is different and everyone is on their own. Nice try though.
all teachers have been eligible since early february. if they haven’t managed to get vaccinated, it’s because they chose not to.
That is absolutely not true. Only school staff who were assigned to in-person in February were eligible to be vaccinated in late January (just a week before they went back to school.) Those who were assigned virtual in Term 3 did not get any priority vaccines but are now (as of about two weeks ago) able to get the vaccine by signing up along with everyone else in DC who has a pre-existing condition etc. there’s no special pool of vaccines and appointments for teachers this time around.
Yes, there was. Four close family members and friends are DCPS teachers- they all got a spot at cvs in less than two minutes once they went in, checked a box saying they are a teacher and boom done. All were able to set an appointment within five days from when they did it. One got a spot two days later
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't opting out and if they are working they don't have time to search for a spot.
It's ... just not that time-consuming. I'm in-person and got a spot back in February when the process was a total cluster, as did many of my colleagues.
You go t a spot because DCPS helped you. There were designated sites for teachers. Term 4 is different and everyone is on their own. Nice try though.
all teachers have been eligible since early february. if they haven’t managed to get vaccinated, it’s because they chose not to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love this new argument that teachers are so busy that they do not have 10 minutes to allocate to basic adult functioning.
"WHEN COULD I DO THAT?" she typed into the internet. "When could I possibly make time to do anything online?!" she added before hitting submit.
She was lucky that she had scheduled herself 15 minutes for a bath on Wednesday, although this did mean that she needed to be fed by IV drip for the day. "The sacrifice is truly worth the plummeting test scores," she thought.
Yawn. And if your child's teacher took the few hours during instructional time you would be screaming about how your childs teacher works for just an hour a day. The whining, complaining, crying about what teachers are doing/not doing for you is getting soooooooo old.
15:52...lemme guess, your boss has no idea you have your hand down your pants as you "work remotely". You sound really important.