Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regular in-person school seems to be working in Europe and Asia. Children apparently are not as susceptible to the disease. High school students are more likely to get it than younger kids. There are few reports of students "bringing it home." If I were an older teacher and could retire, I would probably consider that. We are not in Houston or Miami or some other place where the virus is rampant.
I believe we should start with in-person learning but be ready to go to DL if that becomes necessary.
Oh, for God's sake, keep up, and stop repeating the tired old untrue lines from April and May that "children apparently as not as susceptible to the disease" or "we all know kids don't spread it anyway." It is July, we have much more information and that is JUST. NOT. TRUE.
And please, for the love of crap, don't try to compare the United States to Europe or Asia. Compare their national response and their case rates to ours. NO comparison. None. What they do or do not do there is wildly irrelevant to the U.S.
And, of course, it matters not in the slightest that "we are not in Houston ir Miami," as borders do not protect us, and as a whole slew of selfish jerks are about to come streaming home to the DMV from Florida and Disney. It takes one case to start a new spread. Just wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP responding to above ^^. at our particular school, it was "no new material will be presented live." So the live sessions were mainly social.
Whaaaat? That's crazy! No wonder so many parents are making us out to be villains. What are we supposed to do when the 'higher ups' suck?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes! Start with DL and slowly go through phases 1-3. It makes so much sense to gradually allow students to come in, just like how the states reopened, in phases.
and these teachers who are doing DL so that everyone is SAFE, will they also forgo getting nails done, hair done, eating out and going to bars because we know those are DANGEROUS places for them
and they must be kept SAFE
Yep! Something seriously wrong with our priorities when we can open for shopping, dining, grooming, and even boozing, but we can’t open schools to educate our children.
When society starts placing 300 - 1500 people in restaurant, salon, barber shop, liquor store for 6 - 8 hours a day, five days a week, then you have a decent comparison. Otherwise, something seriously wrong when you think children can't get sick and spread respitory viruses, especially during/after PE and recess. However, since you don't know how many children, in a given school, have asthma treatment plans or compromised immune systems, because it's none of your damn business, you would foolishly think that schools need to be open. Open 'em up. That way, when children start losing classmates to COVID, your dumb ass can complain about the lack of grief counseling available in public schools. Be the solution, not the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Regular in-person school seems to be working in Europe and Asia. Children apparently are not as susceptible to the disease. High school students are more likely to get it than younger kids. There are few reports of students "bringing it home." If I were an older teacher and could retire, I would probably consider that. We are not in Houston or Miami or some other place where the virus is rampant.
I believe we should start with in-person learning but be ready to go to DL if that becomes necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My insight- Mayor is full steam ahead with opening schools. She wants people back to work. And she is worried about the increase in crime. Everyone is advising her against opening but she currently hasn’t been persuaded.
This would not surprise me
There is no way DCPS will open when all the surrounding districts are DL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah we should reopen schools, but not handwaving away the CDC’s guidelines in the hopes that it will all work out. Distance learning isn’t ideal, but I don’t know what kind of socialization (or education) is going to happen if school is all about maintaining social distancing and masks, and it’s certainly not going to happen if there are more cases like the one in Texas where a kid infected both of his parents who subsequently died. And cleaning surfaces doesn’t do a darn bit of good if the spread is, as increasingly thought, through aerosols. Why not err on the side of caution until we know more, and have the supports in place to proceed with the least amount of risk to students, staff, teachers, and parents? Again, it’s no ideal but ... it’s a (hopefully) once in a lifetime situation.
NP. I agree, and I agree that MCPS may end up doing DL all year. But I appreciate that MCPS is watching what is happening and will adjust as possible/needed.
MCPS will not have any live instruction this year. it isnt because they are cautious and monitoring the situation. it's because their teacher union has them wrapped around their fingers and wont allow teachers back in the building. it's a shit show and parents are scrambling to find private schools and tutors since the DL curriculum does not exist. it will be a repeat of the spring. trust me.
Anonymous wrote:My insight- Mayor is full steam ahead with opening schools. She wants people back to work. And she is worried about the increase in crime. Everyone is advising her against opening but she currently hasn’t been persuaded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My insight- Mayor is full steam ahead with opening schools. She wants people back to work. And she is worried about the increase in crime. Everyone is advising her against opening but she currently hasn’t been persuaded.
This would not surprise me
Anonymous wrote:My insight- Mayor is full steam ahead with opening schools. She wants people back to work. And she is worried about the increase in crime. Everyone is advising her against opening but she currently hasn’t been persuaded.
Anonymous wrote:My insight- Mayor is full steam ahead with opening schools. She wants people back to work. And she is worried about the increase in crime. Everyone is advising her against opening but she currently hasn’t been persuaded.