Our School Reopening Plans
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89th, your mom may have a tendency for TIAs, the small strokes. This one could have been the warning shot. Please have her do everything her doctor says to prevent any more of these. They can gradually, or quickly, result in permanent damage and loss of mental functions. It would be tragic for her and your family. She sounds like a lovely woman.
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My experience with high school teachers has been the same - ours worked their asses off last year to try and get lessons out to the kids. It didn't always work, and some were clearly better at it than others, but they were all trying. Quite a few of them also had kids of their own at home, which wouldn't have made it any easier, and I'm sure not all the kids were as appreciative as they might have been.
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Additionally, it has to be noted how many teachers are working their asses off right now, during the summer, to be better once their job starts up again. Attending online conferences, completing online trainings, continuing to answer work emails and attend Faculty Zoom calls, completely overhauling their courses so that material can be taught in person, online, or (more likely) both. These (summer) are not months that we are paid for.
IĀ“d love to be reading more books and watching movies on Netflix. Instead IĀ“m working part time (unpaid).
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That being said, I do feel like I need to add that IĀ“m not trying to drum up any sympathy. I love my job, I love my workplace, and IĀ“m even a little excited at the opportunity to get the training (at my schoolĀ“s expense) to build my skills. But like 89th said, even when the final product is not as good as it would be under normal conditions, and even when it looks like "canned" plans and like not much effort went into it, more likely than not a lot of effort did go into figuring out how to reach the students and how to teach the students and how to maintain those relationships from a distance.
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Keep up the good hard work @Optimistic !!
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@Optimistic said in Our School Reopening Plans:
That being said, I do feel like I need to add that IĀ“m not trying to drum up any sympathy. I love my job, I love my workplace, and IĀ“m even a little excited at the opportunity to get the training (at my schoolĀ“s expense) to build my skills. But like 89th said, even when the final product is not as good as it would be under normal conditions, and even when it looks like "canned" plans and like not much effort went into it, more likely than not a lot of effort did go into figuring out how to reach the students and how to teach the students and how to maintain those relationships from a distance.
A couple of my interwebs friends are teachers. Without a doubt, their situation is asstastic. School's open? Okay, how do they not get COVID? School's not open? Okay, prepare for more work, not less, and a mountain of hangups as everyone gets used to that kind of learning environment.
What makes me feel a little better about all this is that the entire working world is in some type of difficult situation; everyone's dealing with this, one way or another. Means there's a lot more incentive for understanding and flexibility. Bad management can't claim ignorance about he pandemic.
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@Optimistic sorry if I missed it ... are you a teacher now?
Thatās cool! May I ask what grade levels or subjects do you teach? -
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Did you hear it in Homerās voice?
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I sense a political motive as poorly masked as the populace.
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It looks accurate
OMG
This from 10 days ago
The Los Angeles Teacherās Union is one of the largest in the state, and the āUnited Teachers Los Angelesā say public schools should not reopen unless their demands are met.
Their demands include implementing a moratorium on private schools, defunding the police, increasing taxes on the wealthy, implementing Medicare for all, and passing the HEROES Act, which allocated and additional $116 billion in federal education funding to the states.
The unions demands also took aim at charter schools.