This is where I'm at right now!
To say my head is spinning is an understatement. The man who told us the cure to the virus was to take a Tide Pod and sit in a tanning bed now says "a lot of people are saying they don't transmit." Who are those people????? What well respected, trusted scientists are saying this? It's so dangerous when he just says this crap. People out there believe him.
Take a look at this picture for a minute. Read the caption carefully.
There are so many things wrong with this but lets focus on just a few of them:
*Teachers shouldn't be installing any safety measures. States are putting out guidelines and I'm pretty sure "shower curtains" aren't cutting it. No teacher should be doing anything that the district has not vetted and mandated. That's a risk no one should be taking!
*Basically it costs $100 to do her room- I will gladly spend $100 on classroom supplies that make learning better for my students but I am not going to spend my own money to retrofit my classroom for a pandemic!!!!!!!!!
*How are kids going to feel when they go back in a classroom that looks like this? (Remember when I sat in that table that was enclosed by shower curtains. It didn't feel right and it wasn't enjoyable.)
If I'm going to be putting myself in danger the state and my district are going to need to step up to the plate to ensure proper safety measures are in place.
From what I'm hearing, I may be eating lunch outside and having my prep outside. I'm considering options for turning my car into a dining room/ work station and will probably start looking into getting a hot spot for my phone so that I can work on the computer in my car. (This is a something I will gladly do if it helps keep me, my coworkers, and students safer.) I won't know until many weeks from now if that will be necessary, but if I wait to order stuff it will probably be back ordered because I can't be the only teacher anticipating this.
And finally, here are some thoughts I had in response to a friend saying we should start the year virtually.
One of the things that worries most about going back to school is that nothing about that experience will be normal. I feel like kids are going to have this false hope and then the reality is it will be unbelievably weird. Kids sitting in rows, not getting out of your seat, rigid schedules, etc. Then imagine you are in a class and god forbid someone in the room tests positive. The fear of that is going to be intense. And the disruptions in learning. If someone in my class tests positive everyone in class has to get tested and/or stay out for 10 days. Supposedly I can flip a switch and start teaching remotely immediately, while waiting for test results, and stressing about whether I am going to get sick and worry about my kids getting sick. Then we get back in class and it could all get disrupted again if another student/teacher tests positive. And then there's this, for the first time in my teaching career I can't just put my kids before me. That's a really strange emotion for a teacher to have and I wonder how it will impact my teaching in the classroom.
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