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EllieBC

(3,043 posts)
88. Kids with IEPs were allowed back
Sun Mar 24, 2024, 07:15 PM
Mar 24

by mid April 2020 where I am. I know because I have kids with IEPs. And thank goodness for that.

I don’t think anyone doubted that long school closures would be disastrous for kids who need extra support or for families who weren’t able to homeschool or the working poor.

I don't believe that this one example demonstrates that remote learning is... Hugin Mar 24 #1
There is another aspect to this Shermann Mar 24 #25
That's an interesting expansion... Hugin Mar 24 #27
Online learning for adults is entirely different for children Yavin4 Mar 24 #59
I don't think you can draw a hard categorical line like that Shermann Mar 24 #76
Thank You WiVoter Mar 24 #56
I am grateful my grandchildren Tickle Mar 24 #2
Yes only closed a month for our area. jimfields33 Mar 24 #30
Also a nutmegger here 90-percent Mar 24 #34
Then we are neighbors Tickle Mar 24 #39
ma. 90-percent Mar 24 #81
You have your own slice of heaven Tickle Mar 24 #89
Schools did what they thought best at the time. Elessar Zappa Mar 24 #3
Many schools were already underfunded & crowded. Attilatheblond Mar 24 #72
I don't think the effect on the spread of the pandemic is knowable Shermann Mar 24 #4
I agree. It's impossible to know what the alternative would have caused underpants Mar 24 #15
Good point. Also, broadband availability is unequal. yardwork Mar 24 #19
Question how many senior citizens and other aged infirmed people are still alive because kids weren't bringing home.... usaf-vet Mar 24 #78
Fascinating malaise Mar 24 #5
It seems pretty obvious: the longer kids aren't learning in school or at home, they further they fall behind. sop Mar 24 #6
This smacks of "motivated" research. plimsoll Mar 24 #32
Good points. sop Mar 24 #45
Around Here, They've Caught Up... ProfessorGAC Mar 24 #7
Great response. plimsoll Mar 24 #33
+1. and thanks stopdiggin Mar 24 #57
For Many, It Was A Choice Between WiVoter Mar 24 #8
So, when I go to work today ismnotwasm Mar 24 #9
"The shutdowns in America didn't work because there was never full compliance. Ever." Hugin Mar 24 #17
Esactly. The shutdowns were a joke. We should have really shut down, completely for a few weeks and ended the spread. lindysalsagal Mar 24 #20
We would have if Hillary had been Prez. Nt ArkansasDemocrat1 Mar 24 #49
I doubt it. Mariana Mar 24 #60
We never would have ended the spread. Ace Rothstein Mar 24 #80
I agree. MichMan Mar 24 #83
This is the correct response to the article. Remote learning does not directly correlate with self-controlled isolation. keopeli Mar 24 #40
This message was self-deleted by its author keopeli Mar 24 #41
Except for that killing teachers problem JT45242 Mar 24 #10
Exactly. tanyev Mar 24 #28
Bingo! nt Quixote1818 Mar 24 #77
I serve on a School Board. COVID had huge impacts on academic success and learning skills brooklynite Mar 24 #11
It was unavoidable. Elessar Zappa Mar 24 #36
Do you factor in dead students with 0 scores? HariSeldon Mar 24 #44
Where did I say this was a bad choice? brooklynite Mar 24 #47
What about the deaths of educators pressured into working during a lethal viral pandemic? Timeflyer Mar 24 #12
Extremely little coverage of teacher losses. Tells you how much we don't value our teachers. lindysalsagal Mar 24 #21
Could not agree more senseandsensibility Mar 24 #73
They should add to the charts the in-school students who got sick and the in-school students who died. Liberal In Texas Mar 24 #13
That remote learning didn't happen in a vacuum, though. WhiskeyGrinder Mar 24 #14
The teachers felt very vulnerable. yardwork Mar 24 #16
How do we pay and support them better? limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #48
A lot of these "public health and education experts" are people like Ron Desantis and Dr. Joseph Ladapo. sop Mar 24 #18
These averages are misleading: There are always students who can just "do the math" with or without teachers lindysalsagal Mar 24 #22
"Trust the science" Sympthsical Mar 24 #23
You have thick skin to not to be a little freaked by exponential viral spread with overcapacity emergency rooms. nt Shermann Mar 24 #26
I'm not talking about the early stages Sympthsical Mar 24 #29
Some right-wingers were calling to "let Covid rip" at the time. Shermann Mar 24 #37
are you including the closing of schools stopdiggin Mar 24 #66
what magic talismans are you referring to? ret5hd Mar 24 #31
Not at all. plimsoll Mar 24 #42
The closures in Spring 2020 were probably sufficient Prairie Gates Mar 24 #24
A million dead. Where are the Nuremberg style trials for that? ArkansasDemocrat1 Mar 24 #50
And we must NEVER forget that Trump's administration threw out the book Attilatheblond Mar 24 #75
No compassion, no imagination Bad Thoughts Mar 24 #35
I'd agree, but there wasn't much relief on the state mandates. plimsoll Mar 24 #43
"Teachers and administrators were unwilling to do the work WiVoter Mar 24 #55
Thank you snpsmom Mar 24 #79
We simply don't know that closing schools did nothing pinkstarburst Mar 24 #38
Public health measures in the pandemic tried to balance competing risks, each unknown. hay rick Mar 24 #53
On this Rez GusBob Mar 24 #46
A few thoughts. limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #51
"did throttle the rate of viral spread" No. It did not. Yavin4 Mar 24 #61
Well, I'm hard-pressed to see how you arrive at that conclusion. limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #65
New Zealand had a high rate of spread as well as Singapore even with Draconian mitigation measures. Yavin4 Mar 24 #69
And the spread lagged behind other nations by significant margins. limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #74
The virus still spread as it is spreading today. Yavin4 Mar 24 #84
SMH. limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #86
simply doesn't fit the facts stopdiggin Mar 24 #70
From the article Yavin4 Mar 24 #85
It seemed obvious and I advocated for just redoing the Covid two years and every educator said that would be wrong. dutch777 Mar 24 #52
My daughter lost 5th and 6th grade to remote learning NickB79 Mar 24 #54
Hmm - "experts say, extended closures did little to stop the spread of Covid" isn't backed up with much muriel_volestrangler Mar 24 #58
And even if children were found to be less likely to become seriously ill, their parents and grandparents Scrivener7 Mar 24 #63
Turns out "if the transmissibility of subclinical infections is low" was a big "if" muriel_volestrangler Mar 27 #90
Two thoughts: First, on the medical side: until there was a vaccine, COVID Scrivener7 Mar 24 #62
I'm glad we're learning from the mistakes made during COVID so we're much better prepared when the next beaglelover Mar 24 #64
This is dramatic oversimplification angrychair Mar 24 #67
Exactly, I skimmed the full report and it left me with many questions JCMach1 Mar 24 #71
The educational establishment are the ones that consider themselves as the experts MichMan Mar 24 #82
It would be nice if there were even a pretense of caring about the teachers dsc Mar 24 #68
What about all the people that had to come to work daily because their job was deemed essential ? MichMan Mar 24 #87
Kids with IEPs were allowed back EllieBC Mar 24 #88
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