Anonymous wrote:If a month from now the numbers are still low and your kids haven’t caught covid going maskless indoors, we will revisit. I don’t see any benefit being guinea pigs.
Anonymous wrote:Breath deep in your arrogance, breath deep.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I see the people who are allowing their kid to unmask to be more cognizant of 1) the protective aspects of the vaccine, and 2) the low risk to kids to begin with. So the people wanting mask choice have all vaccinated their kids, and are not anti-vaxxers. I think there are some that have read the recent study that the 5-11 vaccine did little in terms of reducing transmission, and that has impacted their thinking about whether it should be required or used as a metric in deciding when schools should unmask.
PP, I think you might be thinking of people that are largely not in DC.
My kids have had the vaccine (5-11). We are still masking and will be for at least the next couple of weeks. Husband and I are highly educated and we understand the science. We chose to continue masking. I don’t particularly care what your kids do. It’s extremely hard to judge why others are still masking or not masking.
FCM mandates in schools were not associated with lower SARS-CoV-2 incidence or
transmission, suggesting that this intervention was not effective. Instead, age-dependency was
the most important factor in explaining the transmission risk for children attending school.
Anonymous wrote:
I see the people who are allowing their kid to unmask to be more cognizant of 1) the protective aspects of the vaccine, and 2) the low risk to kids to begin with. So the people wanting mask choice have all vaccinated their kids, and are not anti-vaxxers. I think there are some that have read the recent study that the 5-11 vaccine did little in terms of reducing transmission, and that has impacted their thinking about whether it should be required or used as a metric in deciding when schools should unmask.
PP, I think you might be thinking of people that are largely not in DC.
FCM mandates in schools were not associated with lower SARS-CoV-2 incidence or
transmission, suggesting that this intervention was not effective. Instead, age-dependency was
the most important factor in explaining the transmission risk for children attending school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At Lafayette there were maybe 2-3 masked kids per room, everyone else had them off.
Wow, I definitely think you will notice a difference between predominantly white schools, and predominately black schools. My school is 90+% black, everyone wore a mask.
I noticed in my predominantly white ES that a much larger percentage of black students were masked than white. That makes sense to me, however. If your community has felt the effects more, and lives with a heightened sense of threat on a daily basis, you might easily be slower to unmask. Our black students who really never fully/effectively masked during the pandemic were unmasked today however.
"Slower to unmask" - so much slower, in fact, that masks will be required again before they do unmask, because of all the transmission among those who really needed a month-long mask break.
Your mask does not make you a better person. Enough with the virtue signaling- I respect your choice, you respect mine.
But ya don't - you accuse people of masking their children as being child abusers and cherry-pick pieces of studies or omicron-focused stats - and discourage vaccination. You have no virtue to signal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand these comments about kids who choose to mask being "fearful." My kids, in ES and MS, understand that by continuing to mask indoors we reduce the odds of someone in our family getting covid. They, like we, would rather avoid getting covid so they choose to continue to mask. They don't seem to mind wearing them and their education doesn't seem to have suffered because they are wearing masks. They don't wear masks outside because they know it doesn't make a difference. They also wear KN95s, not cloth, because they know that cloth masks are pointless and if you are going to cover your face you may as well use something that is effective. Their lives are pretty much back-to-normal except for wearing masks indoors. They know that even with mask wearing there is a chance someone in our house will get covid because we are not locking down completely, but they also know that the odds are good that no one in our household will be hospitalized or die.
Seems like rational decision-making to me. It does upset them when other kids accuse them of being "scared," or don't understand that just because masks are now optional, it still might be a good idea to wear them.
You are right, it could be just a rational choice to reduce your risk of getting Covid. (Although you do have to wonder if they are thinking this through long-term -- the virus isn't going away, we will eventually catch it, which for a kid might actually be a good thing because they will build immunity at a low-risk age against a virus they will have to encounter over and over for the rest of their lives. Are they going to mask indoors forever?) But there are definitely kids who are scared. Maybe they are in the minority, but they are not rare. We went hiking with friends recently, and one of their young kids didn't want to take off her mask out on the breezy trail, even though nobody else in our group was. That is a sign of unreasonable anxiety, and I felt really bad for the kid.
So it’s not rare because your friends kids think that?
Obviously, that is just the most egregious example I have observed. But any kid who still chooses to mask at the playground either has crazy parents or is scared, and there are still quite a few of those to be seen.
I have certainly been confronted by parents at playgrounds for allowing my kids to not wear a mask outdoors. And for every time that has happened, I have heard 10 passive aggressive comments about. "We still wear our mask Larla even if other kids aren't as responsible."
Lol. This is the most DC thing I’ve read in a while.
Anonymous wrote:I think quite a few of the families at our school with kids still masking don't want to catch Covid right now because they don't want to mess with upcoming travel/seeing relatives. That's our reasoning. If rates remain low, I'll encourage the kids to unmask after spring break. But for now, I'm encouraging masks on unless they're miserable with them on (which they're not). It's all a risk-reward calculation. We're all fully vaccinate, and no one in our family has had Covid so far (that we're aware of). So no extra protection there. If we'd just had omicron, I'd be more supportive of pre-spring break unmasking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At Lafayette there were maybe 2-3 masked kids per room, everyone else had them off.
Wow, I definitely think you will notice a difference between predominantly white schools, and predominately black schools. My school is 90+% black, everyone wore a mask.
I noticed in my predominantly white ES that a much larger percentage of black students were masked than white. That makes sense to me, however. If your community has felt the effects more, and lives with a heightened sense of threat on a daily basis, you might easily be slower to unmask. Our black students who really never fully/effectively masked during the pandemic were unmasked today however.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS Elementary teacher here. Our school is about 75% unmasked. Personally I’d love for it to be the new normal to mask up when you are sick. I’m not concerned about Covid in particular now as I’m fully vaccinated, but have loved not constantly getting sick from little ones, sent to school with green snot oozing from their noses, coughing/sneezing in my eyes while I’m tying their shoes or zipping their coats. Please, if you have to send your obviously ill/probably contagious kid to school, spare a thought to the teachers working so closely with them and ask them to wear a mask!![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand these comments about kids who choose to mask being "fearful." My kids, in ES and MS, understand that by continuing to mask indoors we reduce the odds of someone in our family getting covid. They, like we, would rather avoid getting covid so they choose to continue to mask. They don't seem to mind wearing them and their education doesn't seem to have suffered because they are wearing masks. They don't wear masks outside because they know it doesn't make a difference. They also wear KN95s, not cloth, because they know that cloth masks are pointless and if you are going to cover your face you may as well use something that is effective. Their lives are pretty much back-to-normal except for wearing masks indoors. They know that even with mask wearing there is a chance someone in our house will get covid because we are not locking down completely, but they also know that the odds are good that no one in our household will be hospitalized or die.
Seems like rational decision-making to me. It does upset them when other kids accuse them of being "scared," or don't understand that just because masks are now optional, it still might be a good idea to wear them.
You are right, it could be just a rational choice to reduce your risk of getting Covid. (Although you do have to wonder if they are thinking this through long-term -- the virus isn't going away, we will eventually catch it, which for a kid might actually be a good thing because they will build immunity at a low-risk age against a virus they will have to encounter over and over for the rest of their lives. Are they going to mask indoors forever?) But there are definitely kids who are scared. Maybe they are in the minority, but they are not rare. We went hiking with friends recently, and one of their young kids didn't want to take off her mask out on the breezy trail, even though nobody else in our group was. That is a sign of unreasonable anxiety, and I felt really bad for the kid.