What we got was an initial plan of students being in-school 2 days a week and the rest online. It just seemed immediately like a plan that doesn't work for anyone--parents aren't able to work full-time, students have a bizarre hybrid of online stuff and not enough social time, teachers have to do double the work of both in-person learnin…
What we got was an initial plan of students being in-school 2 days a week and the rest online. It just seemed immediately like a plan that doesn't work for anyone--parents aren't able to work full-time, students have a bizarre hybrid of online stuff and not enough social time, teachers have to do double the work of both in-person learning AND online homework. It was supposed to be a way to get kids back on track safely, but it doesn't seem to actually achieve any of those goals.
We got something similar in my district in NH. Fortunately, parents have the option to do 100% remote learning, which we will be doing until a vaccine is widely distributed. I realize that we are very, very lucky to both have that option, and to be able to accommodate it.
What we got was an initial plan of students being in-school 2 days a week and the rest online. It just seemed immediately like a plan that doesn't work for anyone--parents aren't able to work full-time, students have a bizarre hybrid of online stuff and not enough social time, teachers have to do double the work of both in-person learning AND online homework. It was supposed to be a way to get kids back on track safely, but it doesn't seem to actually achieve any of those goals.
We got something similar in my district in NH. Fortunately, parents have the option to do 100% remote learning, which we will be doing until a vaccine is widely distributed. I realize that we are very, very lucky to both have that option, and to be able to accommodate it.