Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
APE kept saying we don't need this or we don't need that, just open now without any of those things. Kept insisting they were not needed, downplayed Covid by saying kids don't spread it, or it doesn't hurt kids, or long covid isn't a thing. All the lies.
And then they noticeably would not even support masks during the mask wars of Jan 2021.
so yes we know how they feel about health measures.
Ummm in hindsight they were correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
APE kept saying we don't need this or we don't need that, just open now without any of those things. Kept insisting they were not needed, downplayed Covid by saying kids don't spread it, or it doesn't hurt kids, or long covid isn't a thing. All the lies.
And then they noticeably would not even support masks during the mask wars of Jan 2021.
so yes we know how they feel about health measures.
Ummm in hindsight they were correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
APE kept saying we don't need this or we don't need that, just open now without any of those things. Kept insisting they were not needed, downplayed Covid by saying kids don't spread it, or it doesn't hurt kids, or long covid isn't a thing. All the lies.
And then they noticeably would not even support masks during the mask wars of Jan 2021.
so yes we know how they feel about health measures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
What a slap in the face that would be to our teachers.
*OR* maybe our teachers would be thrilled to have a SB member lobbying for higher pay and smaller class sizes?
Everyone wants these things. But OK, I'll bite. Just how does she plan to pay for that?
How does ANYone plan to pay for them?
Well since you said this is Miranda's platform, does she have an actual plan to pay for them or are they just empty words?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
APE kept saying we don't need this or we don't need that, just open now without any of those things. Kept insisting they were not needed, downplayed Covid by saying kids don't spread it, or it doesn't hurt kids, or long covid isn't a thing. All the lies.
And then they noticeably would not even support masks during the mask wars of Jan 2021.
so yes we know how they feel about health measures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
Sorry but this entire thread reads as sock puppeting.
I don’t plan to vote, but I’m not sure how you can say someone who 1) doesn’t have children, 2) has never been inside an aps building, and 3) has lived in Arlington for less than a month is more qualified than anyone. Miranda is way more qualified, and if the Arl dems want to stay relevant and continue the endorsement process, Miranda should be the clear favorite.
There are multiple people posting.
He is absolutely less qualified. He also didn’t lead a group that has done so much damage to our community.
+1
I don't like either of then. But I may take newbie youngster over someone who has really damaged our school system. At least Angelo is probably harmless and it can't hurt to have a fresh perspective from a young person.
Whoops. This was where I wanted to post the above comment. I'm voting for the kid at this moment unless he really offs up. Miranda and her supporters do not represent me at all. She would probably ignore anyone who wasn't APE if she is elected.
Miranda has been involved in some capacity or another well before APE. See Drew and Green Valley. She's done more in APS than at least 2 current board members did before they were elected and her oldest kid isn't even in MS yet. She's talking to ASPHA and others. APS has some real challenges. Write someone if you want, but don't throw a vote at this unserious kid.
Did those two SB members lead a group that had such a negative impact on our community?
I’ll take a kid over someone who thinks so lowly of our teachers that she stood by while members in her group trashed teachers, SB members, administrators, and other parents.
One group alone is not responsible for all the negative impact that has happened.
They are responsible for their own actions which absolutely negatively impacted our community.
Lots of crappy things happened during the pandemic. Parents bullying teachers and others wasn’t one that I expected. Instead of supporting and pulling our community together they spread rage and divisiveness.
Many in the AEM crowd do the same. There are obnoxious parents outside of APE, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
Sorry but this entire thread reads as sock puppeting.
I don’t plan to vote, but I’m not sure how you can say someone who 1) doesn’t have children, 2) has never been inside an aps building, and 3) has lived in Arlington for less than a month is more qualified than anyone. Miranda is way more qualified, and if the Arl dems want to stay relevant and continue the endorsement process, Miranda should be the clear favorite.
There are multiple people posting.
He is absolutely less qualified. He also didn’t lead a group that has done so much damage to our community.
+1
I don't like either of then. But I may take newbie youngster over someone who has really damaged our school system. At least Angelo is probably harmless and it can't hurt to have a fresh perspective from a young person.
Whoops. This was where I wanted to post the above comment. I'm voting for the kid at this moment unless he really offs up. Miranda and her supporters do not represent me at all. She would probably ignore anyone who wasn't APE if she is elected.
Miranda has been involved in some capacity or another well before APE. See Drew and Green Valley. She's done more in APS than at least 2 current board members did before they were elected and her oldest kid isn't even in MS yet. She's talking to ASPHA and others. APS has some real challenges. Write someone if you want, but don't throw a vote at this unserious kid.
Did those two SB members lead a group that had such a negative impact on our community?
I’ll take a kid over someone who thinks so lowly of our teachers that she stood by while members in her group trashed teachers, SB members, administrators, and other parents.
One group alone is not responsible for all the negative impact that has happened.
They are responsible for their own actions which absolutely negatively impacted our community.
Lots of crappy things happened during the pandemic. Parents bullying teachers and others wasn’t one that I expected. Instead of supporting and pulling our community together they spread rage and divisiveness.
Many in the AEM crowd do the same. There are obnoxious parents outside of APE, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
What a slap in the face that would be to our teachers.
*OR* maybe our teachers would be thrilled to have a SB member lobbying for higher pay and smaller class sizes?
Everyone wants these things. But OK, I'll bite. Just how does she plan to pay for that?
How does ANYone plan to pay for them?
Well since you said this is Miranda's platform, does she have an actual plan to pay for them or are they just empty words?
I didn't say that. Different people commenting. Question stands. How does anyone plan to pay for these things? AEM people constantly griping about teacher salaries and calling for raises to compensate for inflation AND step increases. How do they propose paying for them????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
And this is why I can't take APE (or Miranda) seriously. You blame "schools not opening" on one person from one advocacy group; yet, we can't blame Miranda (WHO WAS A FOUNDING MEMBER OF APE) for their divisiveness and the despicable acts of many of their members? While she attempted to keep her hands clean, she is complicit in the divisiveness that has taken over Arlington. And that is why I'm not voting for her.
Yup. I'm voting for the outsider who doesn't know one thing about APS. Not because I want to but because I have no other choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
Sorry but this entire thread reads as sock puppeting.
I don’t plan to vote, but I’m not sure how you can say someone who 1) doesn’t have children, 2) has never been inside an aps building, and 3) has lived in Arlington for less than a month is more qualified than anyone. Miranda is way more qualified, and if the Arl dems want to stay relevant and continue the endorsement process, Miranda should be the clear favorite.
There are multiple people posting.
He is absolutely less qualified. He also didn’t lead a group that has done so much damage to our community.
+1
I don't like either of then. But I may take newbie youngster over someone who has really damaged our school system. At least Angelo is probably harmless and it can't hurt to have a fresh perspective from a young person.
Whoops. This was where I wanted to post the above comment. I'm voting for the kid at this moment unless he really offs up. Miranda and her supporters do not represent me at all. She would probably ignore anyone who wasn't APE if she is elected.
Miranda has been involved in some capacity or another well before APE. See Drew and Green Valley. She's done more in APS than at least 2 current board members did before they were elected and her oldest kid isn't even in MS yet. She's talking to ASPHA and others. APS has some real challenges. Write someone if you want, but don't throw a vote at this unserious kid.
Did those two SB members lead a group that had such a negative impact on our community?
I’ll take a kid over someone who thinks so lowly of our teachers that she stood by while members in her group trashed teachers, SB members, administrators, and other parents.
One group alone is not responsible for all the negative impact that has happened.
They are responsible for their own actions which absolutely negatively impacted our community.
Lots of crappy things happened during the pandemic. Parents bullying teachers and others wasn’t one that I expected. Instead of supporting and pulling our community together they spread rage and divisiveness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
I don't believe APE was against any of those things. It is highly unrealistic to think APS would be able to implement all the "upgrades" SOME people/person were insisting must happen fully before any student ever be let back into a building even to pick up something they may have left in their locker before shutdown. APE (rightly) understood that schools needed to open. That doesn't mean they were anti-health upgrades. Those AEM people insisting schools shouldn't reopen until everything in the facilities was perfect.....were they out in the streets saying the same about stores and gyms bars and restaurants and churches? Are they accusing everyone who supported reopening those things of being "anti health upgrades" or teacher haters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do they stand on boundary changes and dealing with facilities? Now that we’re not in a pandemic and the issue is not whether to have in-person instruction, these are the issues that tend to ignite passions.
I would like to know this too. The APE group that Miranda led was consistently against air quality and health upgrades to facilities so I would not expect much from Miranda on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
Sorry but this entire thread reads as sock puppeting.
I don’t plan to vote, but I’m not sure how you can say someone who 1) doesn’t have children, 2) has never been inside an aps building, and 3) has lived in Arlington for less than a month is more qualified than anyone. Miranda is way more qualified, and if the Arl dems want to stay relevant and continue the endorsement process, Miranda should be the clear favorite.
There are multiple people posting.
He is absolutely less qualified. He also didn’t lead a group that has done so much damage to our community.
+1
I don't like either of then. But I may take newbie youngster over someone who has really damaged our school system. At least Angelo is probably harmless and it can't hurt to have a fresh perspective from a young person.
Whoops. This was where I wanted to post the above comment. I'm voting for the kid at this moment unless he really offs up. Miranda and her supporters do not represent me at all. She would probably ignore anyone who wasn't APE if she is elected.
Miranda has been involved in some capacity or another well before APE. See Drew and Green Valley. She's done more in APS than at least 2 current board members did before they were elected and her oldest kid isn't even in MS yet. She's talking to ASPHA and others. APS has some real challenges. Write someone if you want, but don't throw a vote at this unserious kid.
Did those two SB members lead a group that had such a negative impact on our community?
I’ll take a kid over someone who thinks so lowly of our teachers that she stood by while members in her group trashed teachers, SB members, administrators, and other parents.
One group alone is not responsible for all the negative impact that has happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone is wondering how APS teachers feel about a specific group of parents, here is an APS teacher (now former) who put her name on it --
At first, when schools moved to online instruction in the spring of 2020 and parents saw firsthand the hardships teachers were enduring, plaudits poured in for the educators showing remarkable commitment to their profession in a difficult situation they had never trained for. Virtual teaching took much more time to prepare, execute and evaluate. And because students were often not required to turn on their cameras, it was a lot like teaching into a void. But as time crawled on and schools remained closed to in-person instruction, parents became critical, even angry. The hostility parents leveled against teachers was astonishing. In September 2021 alone, 30,000 public school teachers nationwide gave notice. Between August 2020 and August 2021, Florida’s teacher vacancies surged 67 percent, according to a count by the Florida Education Association. In 2021, California’s largest district, Los Angeles Unified, had five times the number of vacancies as in previous years, according to Shannon Haber, a spokeswoman for the district. The number of retirements skyrocketed, and I joined the exodus. I was within a couple of years of my target retirement date, but I left earlier than planned because of the mounting stress around the pandemic and an ever-increasing workload.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/03/08/teachers-woes-vulnerable-profession-robbins/?fbclid=IwAR2UZodgy4iGVxCs8_X8Jp-yrhrMPKsHd6lhvFl5CAJ6rpmbqn9jA0FgT1o
The raw, misdirected hostility towards teachers was so crazy. I’m still shocked by what some parents did.
My kid was on teams **in class** when a parent interrupted and started screaming and cursing at the teacher. In front of all of the kids!!! The teacher handled it well, but WTAF?!
Yup. And then a lot of parents who were angry about schools closing took their kids out of APS and left for private schools, including one of our school bd candidates, so this is a problem they created for others to deal with.
I don't know how we repair the damage they did.
Certainly not by choosing a SB member who thought their actions were acceptable enough to partner with them.
Sorry but this entire thread reads as sock puppeting.
I don’t plan to vote, but I’m not sure how you can say someone who 1) doesn’t have children, 2) has never been inside an aps building, and 3) has lived in Arlington for less than a month is more qualified than anyone. Miranda is way more qualified, and if the Arl dems want to stay relevant and continue the endorsement process, Miranda should be the clear favorite.
There are multiple people posting.
He is absolutely less qualified. He also didn’t lead a group that has done so much damage to our community.
+1
I don't like either of then. But I may take newbie youngster over someone who has really damaged our school system. At least Angelo is probably harmless and it can't hurt to have a fresh perspective from a young person.
We've already given that a try with Diaz-Torres. We don't need another one of her.
She is the absolute worst of the bunch