Anonymous wrote:Make it a child endangerment charge to send you feverish child to school. You sent your kid and other students in the building were endangered. If we can open CPS cases on so called free-range kids playing at the neighborhood park two blocks from home, we can hold parents accountable for Tylenol and dump in the time of COVID.
Before you start making assumptions, my children weren’t free range. I just think it’s a BS reason to investigate parents over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Each one of us contributes to making this a civilized discussion. Let’s take care not to put words into other people’s mouths or tell them they are everything wrong with America. We need to find solutions, not bicker.
You mean we shouldn't tell others that they are "crazy" and "ridiculous" for thinking that schools should be a higher priority than commercial businesses such as hair salons and bars?
Anonymous wrote:MCPS should focus on making the online learning experience stronger. They should put all the focus on that. Sending the kids back for two days a week is just not responsible while the pandemic is spreading. Once more is known about the virus or a vaccine is available, then go back to full time in the building school. Sending the students back and expecting them to wear masks and social distance is irresponsible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS should focus on making the online learning experience stronger. They should put all the focus on that. Sending the kids back for two days a week is just not responsible while the pandemic is spreading. Once more is known about the virus or a vaccine is available, then go back to full time in the building school. Sending the students back and expecting them to wear masks and social distance is irresponsible.
Yeah, but a lot of time was wasted trying to appease the Open ‘Er Up crowd. That’s weeks, if not months, that could have been spent training teachers on both tech and online pedagogy, centrally developing materials where needed, negotiating contracts with textbook and tech companies...
How do you do all that now without actually delaying the start of school?
Anonymous wrote:MCPS should focus on making the online learning experience stronger. They should put all the focus on that. Sending the kids back for two days a week is just not responsible while the pandemic is spreading. Once more is known about the virus or a vaccine is available, then go back to full time in the building school. Sending the students back and expecting them to wear masks and social distance is irresponsible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am completely against doing school in-person while this pandemic is rolling on and on and on. [/b]Adults can't behave responsibly. How can we expect children to?[b] And MoCo schools are so overcrowded that even dividing the student population up, there will be so many kids in school and in classrooms.
For example, take a 5th grade class. With a class of 28 students, the kids will be physically close with each other. It doesn't magically create more room or more teachers if the 4th graders aren't there that day.
Until there is a vaccine or this virus is somehow under control, schools should not reopen. It's incredibly dangerous.
This includes parent behavior. Pre-COVID, there have always been parents who send their sick children to school. They know they have a fever, but give them a fever reducer and send them to school. Once the medicine wears off, the fever spikes and you can easily see the child is sick. Send the child to the health room for a temperature check and low and behold, the child has a high fever. The typical story from the child is that they had a fever before school, but the parent said they couldn’t stay home, so parent gives them a fever reducer and sends them to school. Parents who have always done this will not change their behavior. It becomes more dangerous with COVID. If school resumes in person, temperature checks upon arrival won’t necessarily identify potentially sick children.
So many people are so ignorant that they believe this is acceptable behavior. When the nurse calls the parents they tell her to just continue dosing the child with Tylenol. Which we are not permitted to do! And which doesn’t prevent their child from spreading whatever illness they have to others. Just incredible stupidity and selfishness. This won’t fly during a pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:I am completely against doing school in-person while this pandemic is rolling on and on and on. Adults can't behave responsibly. How can we expect children to? And MoCo schools are so overcrowded that even dividing the student population up, there will be so many kids in school and in classrooms.
For example, take a 5th grade class. With a class of 28 students, the kids will be physically close with each other. It doesn't magically create more room or more teachers if the 4th graders aren't there that day.
Until there is a vaccine or this virus is somehow under control, schools should not reopen. It's incredibly dangerous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Each one of us contributes to making this a civilized discussion. Let’s take care not to put words into other people’s mouths or tell them they are everything wrong with America. We need to find solutions, not bicker.
You mean we shouldn't tell others that they are "crazy" and "ridiculous" for thinking that schools should be a higher priority than commercial businesses such as hair salons and bars?
Yes, I think we should all quit calling one another crazy and ridiculous, period. Right here, you are putting words in people’s mouths. No one is saying they think bars and hair salons are a higher priority than education. What they and state officials are saying is that it is possible to limit the number of people in a bar or a salon in a way it is completely not possible to do in a school under normal conditions. Please don’t assume other people’s priorities or thoughts are so deficient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am completely against doing school in-person while this pandemic is rolling on and on and on. [/b]Adults can't behave responsibly. How can we expect children to?[b] And MoCo schools are so overcrowded that even dividing the student population up, there will be so many kids in school and in classrooms.
For example, take a 5th grade class. With a class of 28 students, the kids will be physically close with each other. It doesn't magically create more room or more teachers if the 4th graders aren't there that day.
Until there is a vaccine or this virus is somehow under control, schools should not reopen. It's incredibly dangerous.
This includes parent behavior. Pre-COVID, there have always been parents who send their sick children to school. They know they have a fever, but give them a fever reducer and send them to school. Once the medicine wears off, the fever spikes and you can easily see the child is sick. Send the child to the health room for a temperature check and low and behold, the child has a high fever. The typical story from the child is that they had a fever before school, but the parent said they couldn’t stay home, so parent gives them a fever reducer and sends them to school. Parents who have always done this will not change their behavior. It becomes more dangerous with COVID. If school resumes in person, temperature checks upon arrival won’t necessarily identify potentially sick children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, but 200 students and 5 adults pass through there 8 am to 3 pm. Sometimes, there’s a dog —permitted under ADA. It’s dirty, hot, and crowded.
Serious question. Which classroom do you teach in that has 200 kids, 5 adults, a service dog, and no windows?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want my child to go back to school too. However, I understand, just like stores, workspaces, etc. the maximum capacity will be 50%. Therefore, to make that work, every child will not be able to go back to school full time in MoCo. Either MCPS prioritizes some kids, e.g., ES, ESOL, FARM, etc. or all kids will have to go in person a few days a week, as NoVA public schools are proposing.
I don't understand how some people on this board think that all kids will go back fulltime in the fall based on the limitations in this county, e.g., space, existing overcrowding, bus schedules, etc.
They are only at 50% capacity for phase 2, it changes in phase 3 to allow more. Northern Virginia is going to phase 3 July 1st and moco should follow soon after. And that's just the beginning of July-still plenty of time before school.
That doesn't change the capacity for schools going into phase 3. Read the VA school guidelines. That is why NoVa is limiting in person education to 2 or max 3 days. Schools in the DMV area are too crowded and have space limits that put maximum capacity at approx. 50%.
I was replying to the comparison to restaurants and other businesses because the post was implying that was a guideline just in general. It's a guideline specifically for phase 2 and will change. And my point remains-if numbers continue to go down in our area and we keep moving through phases it would be completely ridiculous for schools to remain so restricted when it's an essential service.
Anonymous wrote:I am completely against doing school in-person while this pandemic is rolling on and on and on. [/b]Adults can't behave responsibly. How can we expect children to?[b] And MoCo schools are so overcrowded that even dividing the student population up, there will be so many kids in school and in classrooms.
For example, take a 5th grade class. With a class of 28 students, the kids will be physically close with each other. It doesn't magically create more room or more teachers if the 4th graders aren't there that day.
Until there is a vaccine or this virus is somehow under control, schools should not reopen. It's incredibly dangerous.