-fish-
Footballguy
I just don't understand the reasoning there.So yeah, if vaxxed or previously sick within 90 days, no need to quarantine if exposed to a positive case. Just go to school and keep the spread going.
I just don't understand the reasoning there.So yeah, if vaxxed or previously sick within 90 days, no need to quarantine if exposed to a positive case. Just go to school and keep the spread going.
My son's high school is close to this. Unvaccinated close contacts (and there have been 80-ish so far this school year) have to stay home from school for ten calendar days. Vaccinated close contacts don't have to quarantine at all.Daughter's high school is still planning on doing in person school with masks. They announced last week that if you're vaccinated and know you've been exposed to someone with Covid, you don't have to stay home from school.
That seems pretty stupid.
Eventually every kid will fall into the vaccinated or "sick within 90 days" categories and then they don't need to do anything. It is a race between the schools to see who can reach herd immunity via exposure first.I just don't understand the reasoning there.
This seems... unwise.So yeah, if vaxxed or previously sick within 90 days, no need to quarantine if exposed to a positive case. Just go to school and keep the spread going.
 
 Wow. That seems completely irrational.Daughter had lunch at 10:06 today as they are trying to spread them out over 3.5 hours for 1800 students.
We did that last year at our school. What do you think is irrational about it?Wow. That seems completely irrational.
Lunch at 10am....We did that last year at our school. What do you think is irrational about it?
Lunch at 10amWe did that last year at our school. What do you think is irrational about it?
I’m actually ok with this as long as they’re asymptomatic. Maybe add a masking requirement for 10 days if the school doesn’t already require it. The way delta is spreading, if I had a kid who is fully vaccinated and wearing a mask, I’d hate for them to constantly be quarantined and disrupting their learning. At the very least, I think their quarantine should be shortened.So yeah, if vaxxed or previously sick within 90 days, no need to quarantine if exposed to a positive case. Just go to school and keep the spread going.
Lunch at 10am....
Our school starts at 7:15 so by 10:00 AM kids are hungry. I would guess many of the kids don't even eat breakfast just because they are teens who are probably milking every second of sleep possible. Honestly, the kids who complained last year were the kids who had the last lunch. Not sure why it wouldn't limit the spread. We had a mask policy in halls and classrooms. Lunch was the only time kids were gathered in large groups without masks.Lunch at 10am
Thinking that it has any impact whatsoever on Covid spread
Basic logic
After just two weeks of school and several "there was a case of Covid" phone calls, my kid's school is mandating masks again (Hillsborough County). I like seeing them flip Grim the bird.Terrible policy decisions is our shtick here in Florida....the rest of you need to back off!
After just two weeks of school and several "there was a case of Covid" phone calls, my kid's school is mandating masks again (Hillsborough County). I like seeing them flip Grim the bird.
 
 I'm not sure what school he's referring too (can only see what you quoted as I admittedly don't see any of his posts). But the majority of San Antonio, where I believe this school would be, has ignored the governor's mandate and required masking. It's much more efficient when the governor lets the grown ups do their job and run the show.You've made that abundantly clear. I think this thread is more suited for those of us who do.
Our school starts at 7:15 so by 10:00 AM kids are hungry. I would guess many of the kids don't even eat breakfast just because they are teens who are probably milking every second of sleep possible. Honestly, the kids who complained last year were the kids who had the last lunch. Not sure why it wouldn't limit the spread. We had a mask policy in halls and classrooms. Lunch was the only time kids were gathered in large groups without masks.
I think its a good strategy - 10 is just early for me. My kid eats breakfast has lunch around 11:30 but she has to pack a second lunch extra snacks since practice goes from 2:45-5Our school starts at 7:15 so by 10:00 AM kids are hungry. I would guess many of the kids don't even eat breakfast just because they are teens who are probably milking every second of sleep possible. Honestly, the kids who complained last year were the kids who had the last lunch. Not sure why it wouldn't limit the spread. We had a mask policy in halls and classrooms. Lunch was the only time kids were gathered in large groups without masks.
Yeah it’a not ideal but we are trying to prevent a packed cafeteria full of kids without masks.I think its a good strategy - 10 is just early for me. My kid eats breakfast has lunch around 11:30 but she has to pack a second lunch extra snacks since practice goes from 2:45-5

 
 A half-full cafeteria of kids without masks is still a super spreader event.Yeah it’a not ideal but we are trying to prevent a packed cafeteria full of kids without masks.
We did cyber last year. Sending in-person starting Monday. Masks required. I am pretty nervous too.Wife and I had a 1.5 hour "discussion" last night about kids (8 year old twins) returning to school on Monday next week. A few facts:
In our locale, cases are currently at 13/100k daily. This is up like 600% from the low 6-8 weeks ago (pre-Delta). Not quite at winter peak levels, but still not good, and not a good trajectory. Vaccination rates are OK locally with 65% with one dose and 59% fully vaxxed, but this varies by geography, income, and race within the city (follows trends seen nationwide). Obviously, none of the kids (unless in 7th or 8th) in their school will be vaccinated for COVID19. There are about 650 kids in the school in grades K-8, so likely 600 in K thru 6th. All kids and staff will be masked 100% unless eating, but we all know how effective kids masking is...
Each classroom will be treated as a "pod". The school has no outdoor lunch tables, so all lunch will be eaten in the cafeteria. Each grade will eat at the same time slot to spread out the kids. Kinder and 1st will eat in their classrooms to reduce exchange between pods. The district will perform pool testing on all kids each Monday, with results coming back within 36 hours. Each pod will be tested as a group. Any positive case and the whole class gets sent home for quarantine, after which full PCR tests are administered individually to ID the actual positive cases. Once PCR comes back clean, the child may return to class. While out on quarantine, the kids will be asynchronous and get "packets".
The rub here is that the district requires parental consent (opt-in) forms for each student before testing can begin. The district has said that testing will not start until Week 3 of school at the earliest, no matter if all forms for any one class are completed. So all kids come in with unknown status and unchecked spread will happen in those first 2+ weeks.
There is no virtual learning available for the kids unless they were signed up in the middle of the summer, and that was for a full year of instruction. Cannot hop back from in-person to virtual, it's a one time switch. We did not sign up for virtual for many reasons.
My wife wants to hold the kids back until testing begins or the Delta surge peters out. With cases rising in the community and the largest pool of unvaccinated people congregating together, it feels like too much risk in her mind. I am of the opinion that the risks to the kids are relatively small, and we need to prepare for our kids to become COVID positive at some point in 2021. She didn't like that... The FDA is unlikely to give EUA until October at the earliest and then it'll take weeks to get the supply chain prepped for mass vax for kids. My hunch is that my kids are unlikely to get even their first dose before Xmas. Anyway, I say the risk of poor outcomes for them is very small, and even if they get an infection, they are more likely to not notice.
The only options it seems is to either roll the dice and let them go to school or have them miss the first 2 weeks of school at the minimum.
Thoughts?
I should mention that my wife is a faculty member in a school of public health...
 
 We had probably 20 if not more of those last year ...always pins and needles to wait for the everyone has been contacted email.got the weekly, "someone has covid at school" email. in the email, it says that they are contacting those people that were in close contact with the sick person. we have yet to be contacted.
kids and faculty are mandatory masks, while indoors. lunch is a #### show. first football game is 9/3. should be interesting. the district isn't prepared to go virtual, if things really go sideways. this is HS, in CA.
same. just got another one, since typing my post.We had probably 20 of those last year ...always pins and needles to wait for the everyone has been contacted email.
I'll be less concerned this year for now....
 
   Definitely feels that way, doesn't it? Delta + in-person 100% + no vax = bad news for pediatric cases.Man, I really hope we are not just guaranteeing our kids get covid before they can get vaccinated
Interesting that they're still doing that. Both Miami-Dade and my younger son's private school did away with quarantining entire classes this year. Selfishly, I'm glad because I don't want my kids on a constant yo-yo between in-school and remote. But I have no idea what the science says about it as a way of limiting outbreaks. I remember hearing last year that there were very few outbreaks tied to in-person school, and that the vast majority of positives were students catching it outside and bringing it to the school, rather than getting it from someone at school. But I don't remember the details, and not sure how Delta affects that equation.The plan for NYC schools was just announced...
Masks required
Kids will be kept 3 ft apart when possible
Kids will be kept in the same room including lunch
10% of Unvaccinated children will be tested every other week
If a kid tests positive, the class quarantines for 10 days and remote learn for elementary schools
If a kid is close contact and vaccinated, they can return to school for middle and high school
If a kid is close contact and unvaxxed, they can return to school after 7 days if they test negative
Definitely feels that way, doesn't it? Delta + in-person 100% + no vax = bad news for pediatric cases.
Leeroy Jenkins said:Man, I really hope we are not just guaranteeing our kids get covid before they can get vaccinated (and bringing it home).
I previously encouraged my kid to go to her senior year of high school, since she hasn't attended any classes since the first semester of her freshman year due to a pre-covid issue. Now as the concerns with the delta variant and other potential variants rise, I'm going to let her do online again if that's what she wants. I just feel for her that she's not going to have any sort of high school experience on the social side to speak of.got a loooooooong email from the superintendent of the district today. outlining the quarantine procedures moving forward, they are long, complicated, and don't make much sense. they are doing everything they can to keep everything open 100%(with masks) no matter what.
This, unfortunately.The Z Machine said:Definitely feels that way, doesn't it? Delta + in-person 100% + no vax = bad news for pediatric cases.
Stinky bait. Glad to read you are now pro-empathy though.My take?
#### these schools. I'll start my own.
Honestly? Some of you should consider doing the same.
I do feel for all of you. I feel for your kids. This is a tragic and complicated situation. And lots of people won't really understand. I didn't understand until I had the obligation of another human being's well being and future in my hands.
It's interesting what you are capable of in this brutal life when you've committed yourself to loving someone else more than you could ever love yourself.
This, unfortunately.
..... Glad to read you are now pro-empathy though.
Where? Masking?2weeks after school started, our local middle school is forced to go all virtual. 50% of faculty & students are either COVID positive or had close contact.
