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We can see that the rate of infections per million in the UK today is what it was in Holland in the first week of May, and the rate of deaths per million are the same as the middle of May in the Netherlands.
On a like for like basis we are opening up a lot sooner than they did!
When does the school term end there? If I was a school teacher, I don't think I'd fancy being stuck in a classroom with 30 five or six year olds for 2 or 3 weeks. Why risk it? The first school mentioned had 432 kids in attendance. If they all washed their hands only once a day that would take over 14 1/2 hours. Let's say they have 10 sinks and each kid washes their hands 4 times, that's still almost 6 hours a day.
I was told off for accessing and egressing on a wall half a metre tall before, you could literally sit down and swing your legs off and be on your merry way.. some witch saw and went off her health and safety head..caused ructions in our office.. so the next day I recorded her driving over 5mph with no belt on and no hard hat/glasses ( on site so required according to the rules she followed, and bashed me with)
Our lot sent it to her lot and that was that.
It’s a pointless exercise which they have abandoned in Holland, but kept it between kids and adults where they can. Must be the deep thought analysis they go through while smoking the weed that enables them to come up with such a ground breaking idea, it’s way out of unions and government leagues.....
So after all the fuss and drama, my two are going back in for a whopping two half days in the next 6 weeks.....
Yep.
My 2-year old's nursery re-opened last week. We had a letter explaining the measures that they were taking, but the basic position was: "you can't get children to socially distance, so we won't be doing it amongst the kids. Nor are we going to wear face masks, because it will just scare them". Instead they are trying to keep the kids in mini groups which do not interact with one another. So my son has 4 or 5 kids in his mini group, and amongst themselves they pretty much carry on as before. In addition they are doing a hell of a lot of cleaning, and a focus on washing hands. (it is working - he will happily spend 5 minutes washing his hands now). They are pretty vigilant when it comes to distancing amongst the adults/parents, though.
Obviously nursery is a different beast to schools: the staff to child ratio is 3-1 in nursery, and ten times that in a school. But I did have some respect for the nursery for deciding not to even try. Which, it seems, is also the policy for every supermarket I've been to during lockdown- I've yet to go to one where staff made any discernible effort to maintain distance from each other or the customers. Although by far and away the most flagrant breaches of the social distancing rules I've seen have been hospital staff, sat in huge groups eating their lunch right at the peak of the outbreak. Even my builders made token attempts to stay 2m apart, which is really quite difficult when you are lifting a bath which is 1.8m long.
Well they are basically only going in for a chat and catchup with a few of their buddies, which is nice for them. I suggest the welsh education minister looks over to Europe in the next few weeks to see what’s going on, especially Holland. I quite enjoy home schooling my two, looking at the progress they have made with 1 to 1 teaching is interesting also compared to the usual 1 to 25. My six year old can now write better then me (not saying much) and his reading isn’t far behind either! Eye opener
I know, but they love going to school, very sociable kids. I couldn’t do it to them, but I will do a bit more with them around school in the future now. No doubt we will still get work online anyway until the end if the year, maybe forever as it’s working well. It probably doesn’t help that the very few kids I know whose hippy type parents home school (badly) look like they will turn out to be the serial killers of the future and have the social skills of Kim Jong Drakeford
Mines been getting work and she's been happy to do it all herself at home and usually runs out. Quite proud of how she's kept at it, she reckons loads haven't bothered. She'll be going into year 9 next year.
It's good for them to see their mates, especially the younger ones, mines constantly in contact with her's on the phone and she's seen them from a distance a few times as they live local and all pretty near eachother
Her smaller brothers aren't that fussed on learning at home, and my sister who can be quite prim and proper and wants the best from the kids has just left her 5 year old to it as she doesn't see the point in stressing him out over it and having all the tantrums in the house, she does little bits with him but she hasn't gone above and beyond like we all thought she would
Kids are probably better off being stress free through all this anyway, plenty of time to catch up.
Too right I know plenty who, despite moving to areas just to get in certain primary schools, have done hardly anything with their kids at all work wise. I think quite a few parents are realising the previous problem in school wasn’t down to the teachers after all....
People saying there's plenty of time to catch up - who are we expecting them to catch up with?
I've got 2 kids in state school and my girlfriend has a kid roughly the same age in private school.
My eldest gets a reasonable amount of work each day, maybe 3-4 hours and the teachers are online for a few hours each day. There are no repercussions from the school if they don't do the work (there are from me!)
My youngest gets about 3-4 hours of work set per week and his teacher seems to spend about an hour a day actually doing stuff (while still picking up full salary presumably).
In both of their classes I think about 50% of the class regularly attend as an absolute maximum, probably considerably less, and there's a good 25% who have never attended since lockdown began.
My gf's kid is between their ages, has probably 5-6 hours of work a day and the teachers online most of the day, with 100% attendance, it still isn't as good as being there, but at least they are making a decent effort of keeping up with education.
There is no way that the 25% of kids in my kids classes who haven't had any education for months are going to catch up with kids in better schools