Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gayle just said children can catch it and have complications.
https://montgomerycountymd.gov/covid19/data/
0 deaths in MoCo in 0-17 age group.
447 cases out of 100,000 population
If you don’t trust him, how can we reopen schools?
I think ALL the evidence is pointing to schools not being vectors and he should address that instead of consistently pandering to whatever he perceives the current party line to be.
Anonymous wrote:Gayle just said children can catch it and have complications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:42% parents, 25% staff indicated preference for in-person
22% parents, 52% staff indicated virtual preference
35% parents, 22% staff unsure
I’m both a parent and staff. Before I saw the plan, my kids wanted to return (HS) and I was leaning toward return for myself (MS). The plan is so unattractive that it pushed us towards DL for both our kids and me. The hybrid HS plan is too little in person contact with teachers for the risk. And the 3 week cycle is not going to help facilitate student attendance. For me, I can’t imagine both teaching in person AND online simultaneously. I don’t see it as fair to myself or the students at home. If I could, I would teach all of my regular classes face to face outdoors or in a huge, well-ventilated space. Neither is going to happen. The next best alternative is DL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gayle just said children can catch it and have complications.
https://montgomerycountymd.gov/covid19/data/
0 deaths in MoCo in 0-17 age group.
447 cases out of 100,000 population
If you don’t trust him, how can we reopen schools?
Did they just make mention of no fall high school sports? Is there more clarity on that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Excellent first question from new SMOB. (What happens if a student tests positive?)
MCPS and Health department will coordinate. They will do full contact tracing in the building and will identify close contacts to quarantine and spaces that need cleaning. Might be just a classroom, might be the whole school.
How is that possible given the current testing lag? It's 5-7 business days right now. First of all, at best we'd only know someone was positive a week after they got the test. Second, what is the school supposed to do while waiting for the test results from the contact tracing?
Anonymous wrote:Excellent first question from new SMOB. (What happens if a student tests positive?)
MCPS and Health department will coordinate. They will do full contact tracing in the building and will identify close contacts to quarantine and spaces that need cleaning. Might be just a classroom, might be the whole school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gayle just said children can catch it and have complications.
https://montgomerycountymd.gov/covid19/data/
0 deaths in MoCo in 0-17 age group.
447 cases out of 100,000 population
Anonymous wrote:Karla Silvestre asked if today were August 31 with our current numbers could schools open and his response was so long-winded and vague. She rephrased the question based on what Phase we are in and he's still being super vague.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HS courses with only 1 or 2 teachers (some electives) - student may be in-person at school, but for that class they would be learning online with the teacher if the teacher is unavailable to come in to school.
Unreal.
Real. If you found this surprising, you don't understand HS scheduling. I'm more surprised that they clearly said it out loud.
Even assuming the teacher wanted to be in-person, as soon as they have a health issue, they are not available. But there are teachers who should not come in, and the system can't force them.
+1 I am amazed that many posters don't understand the complexity of scheduling and that many of the HS teachers (and some MS teachers) are specialized.