Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
To be clear - the catastrophe here is the pandemic. If schools go under, it is because of the pandemic - not because of teachers, administrators, or county leaders.
The catastrophe is the teachers putting their histrionics ahead of all else and abandoning their students while apparently still expecting to get paid. Until this I had the utmost respect for teachers and supported them financially and emotionally whenever possible. No more. Thanks for nothing, private school teachers.
You are a whiney brat.
Says the person who wants to stay home and not do her job and get paid. I’ve been working 50-60 hours a week since March while teaching my children since the teachers are not doing it.
I'm not a teacher; I'm a parent who is sick of other other parents acting like infants over this situation.
Anonymous wrote:All of the private school parents I know have their children enrolled in travel sports and are traveling all over the country (including hot spots) just to arrive back in town before school starts and throw them all together. Temperature checks are really just providing a false sense of safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
To be clear - the catastrophe here is the pandemic. If schools go under, it is because of the pandemic - not because of teachers, administrators, or county leaders.
The catastrophe is the teachers putting their histrionics ahead of all else and abandoning their students while apparently still expecting to get paid. Until this I had the utmost respect for teachers and supported them financially and emotionally whenever possible. No more. Thanks for nothing, private school teachers.
You are a whiney brat.
Says the person who wants to stay home and not do her job and get paid. I’ve been working 50-60 hours a week since March while teaching my children since the teachers are not doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Our school suddenly has wait lists for most grades from all the parents switching from publics, but ok.
That’s because they said they were opening (duh). No one is going to switch from public to have the privilege of paying for DL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
To be clear - the catastrophe here is the pandemic. If schools go under, it is because of the pandemic - not because of teachers, administrators, or county leaders.
The catastrophe is the teachers putting their histrionics ahead of all else and abandoning their students while apparently still expecting to get paid. Until this I had the utmost respect for teachers and supported them financially and emotionally whenever possible. No more. Thanks for nothing, private school teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Public and privates are doing DL. I would rather be doing DL at our private with small classes and one on one time with advisors than be one of 30 in a public school class. I feel fortunate to be in DL at private now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Public and privates are doing DL. I would rather be doing DL at our private with small classes and one on one time with advisors than be one of 30 in a public school class. I feel fortunate to be in DL at private now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and I think opening in person is unsafe. Not because I'm scared for myself, but because I think putting 500 bodies together will be a disaster, regardless if they are kids or adults. You can distance classrooms all you want, but during transition times kids are going to all be breathing the same air.
I understand your point, but you have not reviewed the plans of every private school in the area. Many are not planning to put 500 people in a building on a single day.
Aren't we supposed to avoid gatherings of 10 and above? Even if a school only has 50 kids at a time, that's still too many bodies together.
Anonymous wrote:Private school teachers are about to be out of a job when their private schools go out of business due to lack of enrollment after this utter catastrophe
Anonymous wrote:is the OP actually a teacher? our preschool is still using papers and books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and I think opening in person is unsafe. Not because I'm scared for myself, but because I think putting 500 bodies together will be a disaster, regardless if they are kids or adults. You can distance classrooms all you want, but during transition times kids are going to all be breathing the same air.
I understand your point, but you have not reviewed the plans of every private school in the area. Many are not planning to put 500 people in a building on a single day.
Aren't we supposed to avoid gatherings of 10 and above? Even if a school only has 50 kids at a time, that's still too many bodies together.
Not sure about DC or MD, but Virginia is in Phase 3, so the gathering limit is 250, not 10.
There is no statewide limit on gatherings in Maryland.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and I think opening in person is unsafe. Not because I'm scared for myself, but because I think putting 500 bodies together will be a disaster, regardless if they are kids or adults. You can distance classrooms all you want, but during transition times kids are going to all be breathing the same air.
I understand your point, but you have not reviewed the plans of every private school in the area. Many are not planning to put 500 people in a building on a single day.
Aren't we supposed to avoid gatherings of 10 and above? Even if a school only has 50 kids at a time, that's still too many bodies together.
Not sure about DC or MD, but Virginia is in Phase 3, so the gathering limit is 250, not 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and I think opening in person is unsafe. Not because I'm scared for myself, but because I think putting 500 bodies together will be a disaster, regardless if they are kids or adults. You can distance classrooms all you want, but during transition times kids are going to all be breathing the same air.
I understand your point, but you have not reviewed the plans of every private school in the area. Many are not planning to put 500 people in a building on a single day.
Aren't we supposed to avoid gatherings of 10 and above? Even if a school only has 50 kids at a time, that's still too many bodies together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher and I think opening in person is unsafe. Not because I'm scared for myself, but because I think putting 500 bodies together will be a disaster, regardless if they are kids or adults. You can distance classrooms all you want, but during transition times kids are going to all be breathing the same air.
I understand your point, but you have not reviewed the plans of every private school in the area. Many are not planning to put 500 people in a building on a single day.