This outbreak would have been contained. But they haven’t done it. I wish everyone could u sweet and just how mismanaged BPS is. It is heartbreaking because they just fail these kids over and over, yet everyone responsible is making six figures, and is never held accountable, save for the occasional golden parachute.
I got notifications about both kids being close contacts with confirmed cases, one on Friday and one on Monday. They've been swabbed daily, and the eldest got the full contact-tracing treatment. (For K1 kids, they assume that everyone touched everyone and everything in the class)
When you have 46 cases across dozens of classrooms, and you have one person whose part-time job it is to handle contact tracing, it's pretty much impossible to keep up with something like this. They shunted most of the excess work onto the school nurses, who are goddamn heroes for what they've been putting up with this year.
Good for them, i've seen so much push back to sign off on it. Do you happen to know what day they test? Once a week is not enough for unvaccinated kids, the logistics of operating testing at a K-8 are difficult.
As mentioned in the last thread, I have two kids at the Curley, the youngest in K1. Because DESE refused to allow schools to make contingency plans for the totally unforeseeable consequences of cramming 30 4-year-olds into a room and trusting their mask discipline, everyone from the teachers to the superintendant are scrambling like mad to throw together a last-second curriculum rewrite for remote learning. They sent kids home with Chromebooks, yes, but no one has used those Chromebooks in months, so when they don't power up or the login doesn't work, the given answer is "call the IT helpline and they'll sort it out." God help those poor bastards at the IT desk tomorrow at 7AM. Meanwhile, we all get to sweat it out about totally inane details like "will school have to run into July to hit the state-mandated 180 days?" while we all scramble to figure out how we're going to get our boss to understand that we have to switch back to supporting our kids in remote learning, which DESE swore up and down could never possibly happen.
This is what happens when you vote for Republicans at any level of government, people. Stop pretending like Charlie Baker is some sort of reasonable person, because he's just as incompetent and malevolent as the rest of the chucklefucks in the national party.
By For Your Consideration on Tue, 11/09/2021 - 10:03pm.
That’s all fine and good but for BPS to have no plan for this and no capacity to test and trace is pretty damning on the system, even if the governor does suck.
This year we have to use the State’s program. And they were getting less than half the kids promised, so testing is now every other week.
At the start, in one elementary, parents reported their kids came into the hall, lined up 6 feet apart, took off their mask, BLEW THEIR NOSE, swabbed themselves. Yes. After having all the kids mask all day, let’s have the governor’s testing bring them into a confined space so they can all blow their noses at the same time. Nothing could possibly go wrong here!
I’m really sorry you’re going through this, but I wanted to point out that even when schools are willing and able to implement/fund a better program, THEY ARE REQUIRED TO COMPLY WITH STATE REQUIREMENTS.
… and one of those requirements was “you can’t plan for this foreseeable event.” That’s on Gov. Baker and his Dept of Education.
Why did this outbreak spread across so many classrooms? Did this school have activities that brought multiple classes together? Is there a ventilation system that shares air between classrooms?
Cafeteria, buses, outside social and athletic activities, siblings from the same household, cousins who attend the same school and hang out on weekends, etc.
There are many ways that school children comingle outside of the classroom.
Maybe if the state actually made convention goes wear masks at the State Dept of Ed conference the other day. It seems that nobody wore masks there and it just trickles down the education world.
Baker and "the state" have declined to enforce mask mandates this time around. The mandate was lifted in May. So how exactly is "the state" going to make "convention goes wear masks"?
The conference was all the administration of the schools. They are not doing what their students are doing ie social distancing etc
Okay? If you say so? They are two different things, but if you say the degree of exposure is the same between a group of adults at a conference and a large number of kids in school, then okay, I guess. I tend to think that different situations don't automatically call for the same measures, but I wasn't at this conference and you apparently were, so...
Perhaps 80% or more of attendees are fully vaccinated. If they were a school district for the conference, then they could apply to have their mask mandate lifted. But they aren’t a school district so those rules don’t even apply.
Comments
Casellius is a disaster.
Her administration just lurches from crisis to crisis in a wholly reactive posture. Why can’t anyone issue spot at BPS?
No kidding, and Wu says that
No kidding, and Wu says that she wants to keep her on the job. Yikes
YIKES!
Shame on DESE for not having a plan in place!
If BPS had tested and traced
This outbreak would have been contained. But they haven’t done it. I wish everyone could u sweet and just how mismanaged BPS is. It is heartbreaking because they just fail these kids over and over, yet everyone responsible is making six figures, and is never held accountable, save for the occasional golden parachute.
They tested. They traced.
I got notifications about both kids being close contacts with confirmed cases, one on Friday and one on Monday. They've been swabbed daily, and the eldest got the full contact-tracing treatment. (For K1 kids, they assume that everyone touched everyone and everything in the class)
When you have 46 cases across dozens of classrooms, and you have one person whose part-time job it is to handle contact tracing, it's pretty much impossible to keep up with something like this. They shunted most of the excess work onto the school nurses, who are goddamn heroes for what they've been putting up with this year.
Parents also have to . . .
Consent to testing and MANY are not!
That came up
The Curly has consent forms for 80% of students.
Good for them, i've seen so
Good for them, i've seen so much push back to sign off on it. Do you happen to know what day they test? Once a week is not enough for unvaccinated kids, the logistics of operating testing at a K-8 are difficult.
What a mess
As mentioned in the last thread, I have two kids at the Curley, the youngest in K1. Because DESE refused to allow schools to make contingency plans for the totally unforeseeable consequences of cramming 30 4-year-olds into a room and trusting their mask discipline, everyone from the teachers to the superintendant are scrambling like mad to throw together a last-second curriculum rewrite for remote learning. They sent kids home with Chromebooks, yes, but no one has used those Chromebooks in months, so when they don't power up or the login doesn't work, the given answer is "call the IT helpline and they'll sort it out." God help those poor bastards at the IT desk tomorrow at 7AM. Meanwhile, we all get to sweat it out about totally inane details like "will school have to run into July to hit the state-mandated 180 days?" while we all scramble to figure out how we're going to get our boss to understand that we have to switch back to supporting our kids in remote learning, which DESE swore up and down could never possibly happen.
This is what happens when you vote for Republicans at any level of government, people. Stop pretending like Charlie Baker is some sort of reasonable person, because he's just as incompetent and malevolent as the rest of the chucklefucks in the national party.
That’s all fine and good but
That’s all fine and good but for BPS to have no plan for this and no capacity to test and trace is pretty damning on the system, even if the governor does suck.
Newton had great testing… last year
This year we have to use the State’s program. And they were getting less than half the kids promised, so testing is now every other week.
At the start, in one elementary, parents reported their kids came into the hall, lined up 6 feet apart, took off their mask, BLEW THEIR NOSE, swabbed themselves. Yes. After having all the kids mask all day, let’s have the governor’s testing bring them into a confined space so they can all blow their noses at the same time. Nothing could possibly go wrong here!
I’m really sorry you’re going through this, but I wanted to point out that even when schools are willing and able to implement/fund a better program, THEY ARE REQUIRED TO COMPLY WITH STATE REQUIREMENTS.
… and one of those requirements was “you can’t plan for this foreseeable event.” That’s on Gov. Baker and his Dept of Education.
Curley not Conley in 2nd to last paragraph
Thanks for reporting on this Adam.
You mistakenly wrote "Conley" instead of "Curley" in the second to last paragraph.
Fixed
Thanks!
Why did this outbreak spread
Why did this outbreak spread across so many classrooms? Did this school have activities that brought multiple classes together? Is there a ventilation system that shares air between classrooms?
A few guesses
Cafeteria, buses, outside social and athletic activities, siblings from the same household, cousins who attend the same school and hang out on weekends, etc.
There are many ways that school children comingle outside of the classroom.
Maybe if the state actually
Maybe if the state actually made convention goes wear masks at the State Dept of Ed conference the other day. It seems that nobody wore masks there and it just trickles down the education world.
Just to catch you up...
Baker and "the state" have declined to enforce mask mandates this time around. The mandate was lifted in May. So how exactly is "the state" going to make "convention goes wear masks"?
Maybe they should do what
Maybe they should do what they are making their students do. It is just too much to expect that they would do that.
I'm confused
Can you elaborate? It's unclear who you mean by "they" and "their" and "what" and "that". Can you try again using nouns?
The conference was all the
The conference was all the administration of the schools. They are not doing what their students are doing ie social distancing etc
Okay?
Okay? If you say so? They are two different things, but if you say the degree of exposure is the same between a group of adults at a conference and a large number of kids in school, then okay, I guess. I tend to think that different situations don't automatically call for the same measures, but I wasn't at this conference and you apparently were, so...
Yeah
Perhaps 80% or more of attendees are fully vaccinated. If they were a school district for the conference, then they could apply to have their mask mandate lifted. But they aren’t a school district so those rules don’t even apply.