Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
I agree. 100%
ES Teacher
Kids need good teachers, supportive involved parents and a good curriculum that includes textbooks and homework for reinforcement. And, if you don't do the work, you fail. Socially passing kids only hurts them academically later on.
Kids need to be safe in school. There is no distancing, testing is a joke and most people stopped caring.
You can say "we" will be ok, but that we needs to be you and not the rest of us. Don't give people a false sense of security. You have just been lucky as a teacher that none of your students or their parents have died.
The part in bold seems kind of random.
"No distancing"? "Most people stopped caring"? What are you basing this on? In my school every student and adult is masked. Students are distanced at lunch. 15 student cases out of 1,700 students between two elementary schools in a little over 3 months is not "luck". Other schools have similar numbers.
Good for your school. Ours has no distancing.
So don’t make such broad statements like “there is no distancing” and “most people stopped caring”.
How many cases has your school had? Where are you located?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
I agree. 100%
ES Teacher
Kids need good teachers, supportive involved parents and a good curriculum that includes textbooks and homework for reinforcement. And, if you don't do the work, you fail. Socially passing kids only hurts them academically later on.
Kids need to be safe in school. There is no distancing, testing is a joke and most people stopped caring.
You can say "we" will be ok, but that we needs to be you and not the rest of us. Don't give people a false sense of security. You have just been lucky as a teacher that none of your students or their parents have died.
The part in bold seems kind of random.
"No distancing"? "Most people stopped caring"? What are you basing this on? In my school every student and adult is masked. Students are distanced at lunch. 15 student cases out of 1,700 students between two elementary schools in a little over 3 months is not "luck". Other schools have similar numbers.
Good for your school. Ours has no distancing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of us still are in Virtual learning. No, the counties will keep going with no distancing, fake testing and everything else and only when a few people die (those who others deem worthy) then they may at least put some precautions in place.
I'm sorry to hear that having your kids home every day for almost two years has melted your brain. It's understandable. And preventable, by sending your kids to school, which is where they belong.
I love having them at home and will miss them when they go back. When people like you can behave more responsible or the schools handle covid better, we'll consider returning. I'm sorry you don't love your kids enough to have them home. Maybe you shouldn't have had kids if you cannot handle having them around.
Schools are safe. For kids and for their family. If you want testing, they're doing that too. Your absurd post shows the deleterious effects of being locked down for extended periods of time.
No, schools are not safe. Most aren't following the CDC guidelines including testing and social distancing. Most have 35+ students to a classroom and in MS and HS those kids rotate classes. Many are only doing opt in testing and its random so out of 1000 students maybe 50 are tested and its the same kids all the time as any parent who is engaging in risky behavior isn't going to opt in.
How many covid deaths in DMV are attributable to covid? 0?
Anonymous wrote:Many are only doing opt in testing and its random so out of 1000 students maybe 50 are tested and its the same kids all the time as any parent who is engaging in risky behavior isn't going to opt in.
I am not engaging in risky behavior, but I am also not opting my child in again (our district does it on a week to week basis). The last time he was tested, he lost almost an hour of instructional time and had to make the work up on his own. This doesn't work well for us, as he has a learning disability. He is also 13 years old, and fully vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
I agree. 100%
ES Teacher
Kids need good teachers, supportive involved parents and a good curriculum that includes textbooks and homework for reinforcement. And, if you don't do the work, you fail. Socially passing kids only hurts them academically later on.
Kids need to be safe in school. There is no distancing, testing is a joke and most people stopped caring.
You can say "we" will be ok, but that we needs to be you and not the rest of us. Don't give people a false sense of security. You have just been lucky as a teacher that none of your students or their parents have died.
The part in bold seems kind of random.
"No distancing"? "Most people stopped caring"? What are you basing this on? In my school every student and adult is masked. Students are distanced at lunch. 15 student cases out of 1,700 students between two elementary schools in a little over 3 months is not "luck". Other schools have similar numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
I agree. 100%
ES Teacher
Kids need good teachers, supportive involved parents and a good curriculum that includes textbooks and homework for reinforcement. And, if you don't do the work, you fail. Socially passing kids only hurts them academically later on.
Kids need to be safe in school. There is no distancing, testing is a joke and most people stopped caring.
You can say "we" will be ok, but that we needs to be you and not the rest of us. Don't give people a false sense of security. You have just been lucky as a teacher that none of your students or their parents have died.
Many are only doing opt in testing and its random so out of 1000 students maybe 50 are tested and its the same kids all the time as any parent who is engaging in risky behavior isn't going to opt in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
Different teacher.
Kids don't "need" in-person school. It is a "nice to have" not a "must have." Do parents "need" childcare? Yes. That's the reason why schools may stay open even after kids and teachers start to die.
There is no vaccine yet that is effective against Omicron.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
Different teacher.
Kids don't "need" in-person school. It is a "nice to have" not a "must have." Do parents "need" childcare? Yes. That's the reason why schools may stay open even after kids and teachers start to die.
There is no vaccine yet that is effective against Omicron.
Your last statement is simply wrong. Show me one citation for that “teacher”
Uh, why don't YOU show a citation for a peer-reviewed article that proves that there IS a vaccine that is effective against Omicron. We'll wait ...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/omicron-public-weary-restrictions/2021/11/29/3832e4aa-508b-11ec-8769-2f4ecdf7a2ad_story.html
"If there is a major resurgence of the pandemic, the political will for the harshest virus mitigation measures has largely evaporated even in the most liberal parts of the country, which have been the most open to restrictions, experts say.
“The threshold to shut things down is going to be much higher than it was,” said Robert Wachter, who chairs the Department of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. “One of the durable takeaway lessons is that the closing of schools is really a terrible thing to do and should be avoided at all costs.”"
Amen. Kids need in-person school. We will be ok. Mask and vaccinate.
—a teacher
I agree. 100%
ES Teacher
Kids need good teachers, supportive involved parents and a good curriculum that includes textbooks and homework for reinforcement. And, if you don't do the work, you fail. Socially passing kids only hurts them academically later on.
Kids need to be safe in school. There is no distancing, testing is a joke and most people stopped caring.
You can say "we" will be ok, but that we needs to be you and not the rest of us. Don't give people a false sense of security. You have just been lucky as a teacher that none of your students or their parents have died.