Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no clear evidence that masks impact children’s speech or social skills. It’s just something that gets repeated because anti-maskers need a justification.
Nobody needs to justify anything. I don't mask, nor do my kids, and we haven't for a long time. I don't care what you think about that one way or the other.
Anonymous wrote:You're all being awful. OP has a right to be concerned about her child. She's not "blaming" the teacher for her son's speech delay, NOR is she suggesting the teacher shouldn't' have a right to make her own decision on masking. She's simply expressing her concern that it is having a negative impact on her child this year -- a child who was quite small when the pandemic first began and has likely struggled with schooling since 2020 with school closures, virtual education, constant stoppages and quarantines, etc. OP, if your son has an IEP I would see if you can switch classes -- making clear that you respect this teacher's wish to remain masked, but that it will have a negative impact on your son's speech and language development.
I don't know why it's so hard for some people to understand that both the OP AND the teacher could BOTH have legitimate viewpoints, and that neither one is 'wrong' -- but that the situation isn't optimal for both of them right now.
Anonymous wrote:There is no clear evidence that masks impact children’s speech or social skills. It’s just something that gets repeated because anti-maskers need a justification.
Anonymous wrote:I work in a classroom. I wear a mask. There are no problems with being understood. I also pull down my mask if I have to get someone's attention. Everything seems to work just fine. Parents -- you are not in charge of everything. Get a governess if you want to control every aspect of how your teachers teach.
Anonymous wrote:They have special masks with clear plastic in front of the mouth for teaching kids with special needs. MCPS schools have them. I don't understand what the big deal is. Oh yeah, MCPS parents who have to complain about some.thing. always. Never mind, I forgot.
Anonymous wrote:They have special masks with clear plastic in front of the mouth for teaching kids with special needs. MCPS schools have them. I don't understand what the big deal is. Oh yeah, MCPS parents who have to complain about some.thing. always. Never mind, I forgot.
Anonymous wrote:I would only make a big deal about this if my child were hard of hearing.
By 1st/2nd grade, teacher speech patterns likely won't influence a speech delay one way or another.
If your child cannot yet read, then work with them at home on the letter sounds and tongue placement. I wouldn't change teachers in your particular circumstance.
Anonymous wrote:Why is a new teacher wearing a mark relevant to your kid’s delays?
I honestly don’t get it. Is there a theory that a teacher in a mask is less effective at dealing with kids that have learning disabilities?
Anonymous wrote:You're all being awful. OP has a right to be concerned about her child. She's not "blaming" the teacher for her son's speech delay, NOR is she suggesting the teacher shouldn't' have a right to make her own decision on masking. She's simply expressing her concern that it is having a negative impact on her child this year -- a child who was quite small when the pandemic first began and has likely struggled with schooling since 2020 with school closures, virtual education, constant stoppages and quarantines, etc. OP, if your son has an IEP I would see if you can switch classes -- making clear that you respect this teacher's wish to remain masked, but that it will have a negative impact on your son's speech and language development.
I don't know why it's so hard for some people to understand that both the OP AND the teacher could BOTH have legitimate viewpoints, and that neither one is 'wrong' -- but that the situation isn't optimal for both of them right now.