culdeus said:
Not sure what the toughest issue(s) are to solve, trying to list them here.
- How to manage substitute teaching where school continues while a teacher is recovering. Main issue being the students had contact with the teacher, and you are asking someone to enter that environment. This seems unrealistic.
- What caseload, or situation would cause school to be shut down/cancelled for a period of time? Is it student based or teacher based?
- What are the requirements for a student to return post positive test? If they show no symptoms will they join online programs? Or just sit it out?
- High.School.Football. How? One proposal is move this to the spring. This makes the most sense.
- If the idea is to keep kids somewhat in homerooms how do you mange selected classes like foreign languages and clubs/extracurricular?
- After school programs. How?
These are all excellent questions that I honestly don't really know the answer to. But they would all need to have answers before we start back with an on-site school program.
Substitutes - I imagine the need for subs will much higher than normal, and there will be many who will refuse to work. With that said, unemployment is at an all-time high, so the pool of potential subs may not be as shallow as we think. If a school uses a hybrid model, subs would not be in as much demand.
What caseload, or situation would cause school to be shut down/cancelled for a period of time?I have no idea. School districts may actually have some kind of policy for this already (hopefully). They've just never had to use it before.
What are the requirements for a student [or teacher] to return post positive test?The CDC has put out an advisement on this that involves the # of days since testing positive/probable exposure/symptoms starting/symptoms ending/etc. OR, the school could treat it the way they've always treated every illness. If you feel well enough to come to school, come to school.
High.School.Football. How? One proposal is move this to the spring. No idea. I don't know how how a modified version could exist at all . All other associated activities like drill team, cheerleaders, marching band would be heavily affected as well if there is no football and with social distancing restrictions, but they could at least exist on an abbreviated scale. No football hurts entire economies believe it or not, so this is a tough one! I had not heard the idea of moving to Spring. That's an interesting idea, but I don't know how I feel about it yet!
Homerooms, foreign languages, clubs/extracurricular, after-school programsI high school & junior high would have to be conducted normally. Classes are too specialized for homerooms. The idea of moving teachers room-to-room instead of students is an option, but many classes require certain facilities (science labs, CTE classes). Some extra-curricular programs may be diminished or impossible, but many would be fine.