Anonymous wrote:Have any of you who want zoom or videoconferencing actually seen how they work? Imagine being on a FaceTime call with a chat feature and 25 interrupting kids commenting “ I can’t see anything”, “how do I get to chat?” Etc etc for 50 minutes. It’s like a tech support call from hell. I’d love a big ole packet and less apps.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you who want zoom or videoconferencing actually seen how they work? Imagine being on a FaceTime call with a chat feature and 25 interrupting kids commenting “ I can’t see anything”, “how do I get to chat?” Etc etc for 50 minutes. It’s like a tech support call from hell. I’d love a big ole packet and less apps.
The zoom leader should be muting the conference and calling on students accordingly while unmuting them. It’s not different that a work conference call that has > 10 people. You mute the entire call people!
We are required to use Microsoft Teams, which is like Zoom in many ways. One thing it doesn’t have is a way to keep everyone muted. I had a group of about 15 kids today and muted them all and explained why they stay have to stay muted except to talk. A few times I had to mute everyone and just said it got too loud. It took some explanation of video conferencing etiquette but for the first time for all of us, my kids did awesome, and they said they loved getting to see everyone. Whether everyone tunes in every day doesn’t really matter but I think some live connection is super important for kids the same way it is for adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m frustrated that DCPS headquarters has said Zoom is off limits, but that individual principals are encouraging it. I don’t trust my principal to have my back if I use it against formal policy.
I didn’t know ‘downtown’ said it couldn’t be used! That’s crazy. I get their logic, I suppose. But my school is not using it to teach but to maintain a sense of class structure and community. A paper packet can address learning, but it can’t do a thing about connection.
Anonymous wrote:I’m frustrated that DCPS headquarters has said Zoom is off limits, but that individual principals are encouraging it. I don’t trust my principal to have my back if I use it against formal policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you who want zoom or videoconferencing actually seen how they work? Imagine being on a FaceTime call with a chat feature and 25 interrupting kids commenting “ I can’t see anything”, “how do I get to chat?” Etc etc for 50 minutes. It’s like a tech support call from hell. I’d love a big ole packet and less apps.
The zoom leader should be muting the conference and calling on students accordingly while unmuting them. It’s not different that a work conference call that has > 10 people. You mute the entire call people!
I will add that I think LIVE zoom meetings should be for middle school and up. Pre-recorded lectures are more than adequate for elementary kids and the parents can assist in evenings or weekends. I don’t think live virtual meetings should be done for kids that can’t navigate solo (maybe 5th grade and up).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you who want zoom or videoconferencing actually seen how they work? Imagine being on a FaceTime call with a chat feature and 25 interrupting kids commenting “ I can’t see anything”, “how do I get to chat?” Etc etc for 50 minutes. It’s like a tech support call from hell. I’d love a big ole packet and less apps.
The zoom leader should be muting the conference and calling on students accordingly while unmuting them. It’s not different that a work conference call that has > 10 people. You mute the entire call people!
We are required to use Microsoft Teams, which is like Zoom in many ways. One thing it doesn’t have is a way to keep everyone muted. I had a group of about 15 kids today and muted them all and explained why they stay have to stay muted except to talk. A few times I had to mute everyone and just said it got too loud. It took some explanation of video conferencing etiquette but for the first time for all of us, my kids did awesome, and they said they loved getting to see everyone. Whether everyone tunes in every day doesn’t really matter but I think some live connection is super important for kids the same way it is for adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! leave. Leave for the burbs. PLEASE!
Oh wait—- FAirfax & Moco have sent nothing. No tele teaching. Quick- find a new reason to shake your fists!!!!
Not true. MD/VA burbs sent out grade level packets created by their central office teams not by teachers so that every grade level has the same information. Judging by this thread, DCPS is a crapshoot depending on your school. People have mentioned that some schools are utilizing technology, while others have a firm no technology guideline in place. I love how liberally minded people pretend to champion equitable practices, until it comes to their progeny, then it’s as long as I get mine first, someone else can be second. #selfish #NOTequitable #DCPS-Equity-sucks
Deal has online teaching, which means west of the Park is using the online Microsoft Platform but the further away a school is from the Park (aka Rock Creek Park) that might not be the case. It also might be the case that only certain school feeder patterns are using online teaching: Deal, Stuart Hobson, JKLM pattern, Banneker, SWS, SWW, Wilson, Cap Hill Montessori
Bullsh*t.
I’m s moco mom. Nothing.
FAirfax teachers were told to focus on their health & family. Stop lying
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely insane that all schools are sending home laptops or chromebooks or something. For everyone. I can just see the laptop carts in our school right now. This is a huge failure of DCPS.
ERRRR. Meant are NOT sending home equipment. I give up.
Honestly, if DCPS sent home equipment, do you know how many of those laptops would be "missing" by the time school year starts? Then you all would have to deal with classrooms with only 1 computer for 25 kids. I'd rather have my kids stop learning than to jeopardize learning for years after Covid19.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love my principal.
School leader just sent an email telling us she’d manage the crazy parents- get them off our backs & that we can should keep doing what we can.
I’m so jealous; we just enable ours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you who want zoom or videoconferencing actually seen how they work? Imagine being on a FaceTime call with a chat feature and 25 interrupting kids commenting “ I can’t see anything”, “how do I get to chat?” Etc etc for 50 minutes. It’s like a tech support call from hell. I’d love a big ole packet and less apps.
The zoom leader should be muting the conference and calling on students accordingly while unmuting them. It’s not different that a work conference call that has > 10 people. You mute the entire call people!