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    Default COVID kids

    As a mom of five children, I’m acutely aware that this decision increases the burden our youngest generation is bearing to control a virus that rarely makes them sick. Furthermore, experts say children are not driving transmission of COVID-19, especially in school settings.
    https://www.nationalreview.com/2020/...20COVID%20Kids

    The outbreak challenges the resilience of vulnerable children as it increases in children’s environments the number of already existing risks . . . and reduces the number of protective forces,” states a report published in August by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “The pandemic and the associated policy responses of confinement and social distancing touch on almost every part of children’s worlds.”

    Right now, kids are more vulnerable to education loss, increased risk of family violence, loneliness, derailed trajectories including higher drop-out rates, depression, suicide, and increased attacks by online sexual predators.

    The spring should have been the canary in the mine, exposing the sudden crippling of all in-person K–12 education as too dangerous to ever repeat. Just the educational losses alone — 15,000 students completely AWOL in Los Angeles, millions without high-speed Internet access at home, and those doing school online losing between three months and one year of learning — are unacceptable.

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    Los Angeles Unified School District students Keiley Flores, 13, Andrea Ramos, 10, and Alexander Ramos, 8, work on school-issued computers with unreliable internet connectivity at their home in Los Angeles, Calif., August 18, 2020. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)
    School closures are putting a generation in danger, again.

    Amid another nationwide COVID-19 spike, schools are closing again coast to coast, and one thing is certain: It’s wreaking havoc on a generation.

    Earlier this month, our governor here in Michigan directed high-school students to go 100 percent online; likewise, hundreds of thousands of K–12 students nationwide return to homebound, remote learning even though in-person connection is the linchpin for academic success, according to many teachers.

    As a mom of five children, I’m acutely aware that this decision increases the burden our youngest generation is bearing to control a virus that rarely makes them sick. Furthermore, experts say children are not driving transmission of COVID-19, especially in school settings. I wonder whether Generation Z — the 56 million school-age Americans who have been dealt disorder and whiplash since March — might someday be called by another name, “the COVID kids,’ since it seems more and more likely that this pandemic is going to irreversibly define them.


    “The outbreak challenges the resilience of vulnerable children as it increases in children’s environments the number of already existing risks . . . and reduces the number of protective forces,” states a report published in August by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “The pandemic and the associated policy responses of confinement and social distancing touch on almost every part of children’s worlds.”

    Right now, kids are more vulnerable to education loss, increased risk of family violence, loneliness, derailed trajectories including higher drop-out rates, depression, suicide, and increased attacks by online sexual predators.

    The spring should have been the canary in the mine, exposing the sudden crippling of all in-person K–12 education as too dangerous to ever repeat. Just the educational losses alone — 15,000 students completely AWOL in Los Angeles, millions without high-speed Internet access at home, and those doing school online losing between three months and one year of learning — are unacceptable.

    And yet in August, adults in power ignored the strong recommendation of the American Association of Pediatrics and the CDC, and 74 percent of the 100 largest school districts returned to school online. Now it’s November, and schools that had worked so hard to deliver protocol-laden in-person learning are shutting their doors again, including ones in Connecticut and Iowa.

    High-school science teacher Alexis Zieler in Michigan told me that virtual high school is “a disaster” that is working well only for very few students. Of her 35 students in virtual biology class, 30 are struggling, she said. The accountability and motivation she provides in spades inside her classroom are gone. So too is her arsenal of creative teaching methods.

    “There are no varied learning styles in virtual at all,” Zieler says. “My student who is tied for valedictorian, she’s really bright, and a hard worker. She gets nothing from those videos. It’s only working for students whose learning style is in sort of a Goldilocks sweet spot.”

    Jackie Hall, a mom of four in California’s Bay Area, told me that virtual school for her eleven-year-old son who has an IEP for dyslexia made him feel like a failure, and online teachers offered no extra attention or help.

    “By the end of the day, he was a disaster,” Hall says. “His attitude toward everything was bad — it was heartbreaking. And each day he was just falling farther and farther behind.”

    After two weeks of virtual schooling this fall, she pulled him out and is now homeschooling him — “something I never thought I could or would do,” she says.

    In Northern Virginia, mom of four boys Veronika Cowen told me that virtual elementary school is “horrible,” especially for her kindergartener, who “refuses to do any work virtually.” Further, Cowen’s own goals as a parent have derailed.

    “My biggest accomplishment as a modern-day parent was that I managed to keep my boys not addicted to screen . . . till now,” she says. “Now I am supposed to keep them staring at screens all day long.”

    These are common woes of the dozens of parents I’ve talked with who feel frustrated, stuck, and angry. But they’re also problems on the surface; the underbelly of homebound, virtual learning and isolation is much uglier.

    Experts are calling the pandemic a perfect storm for abusers and pedophiles, whose access to children in 2020 is unprecedented. Last month the FBI and Department of Justice issued a joint warning asking parents to wake up to predators’ “increased access to children,” stating, “Parents don’t know all the apps or how to use them, but sexual predators do. They know where the kids are and how to reach them.” Law enforcement is reporting record levels of online child sexual crimes worldwide, including in Scotland and Louisiana. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children says a good rule of thumb for school-age kids is “the expectation . . . that they are only connected with people they know in real life.”

    But family violence can get all too real for virtual learners isolated at home......

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    Quote Originally Posted by anatta View Post
    Los Angeles Unified School District students Keiley Flores, 13, Andrea Ramos, 10, and Alexander Ramos, 8, work on school-issued computers with unreliable internet connectivity at their home in Los Angeles, Calif., August 18, 2020. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)
    School closures are putting a generation in danger, again.

    Amid another nationwide COVID-19 spike, schools are closing again coast to coast, and one thing is certain: It’s wreaking havoc on a generation.

    Earlier this month, our governor here in Michigan directed high-school students to go 100 percent online; likewise, hundreds of thousands of K–12 students nationwide return to homebound, remote learning even though in-person connection is the linchpin for academic success, according to many teachers.

    As a mom of five children, I’m acutely aware that this decision increases the burden our youngest generation is bearing to control a virus that rarely makes them sick. Furthermore, experts say children are not driving transmission of COVID-19, especially in school settings. I wonder whether Generation Z — the 56 million school-age Americans who have been dealt disorder and whiplash since March — might someday be called by another name, “the COVID kids,’ since it seems more and more likely that this pandemic is going to irreversibly define them.


    “The outbreak challenges the resilience of vulnerable children as it increases in children’s environments the number of already existing risks . . . and reduces the number of protective forces,” states a report published in August by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “The pandemic and the associated policy responses of confinement and social distancing touch on almost every part of children’s worlds.”

    Right now, kids are more vulnerable to education loss, increased risk of family violence, loneliness, derailed trajectories including higher drop-out rates, depression, suicide, and increased attacks by online sexual predators.

    The spring should have been the canary in the mine, exposing the sudden crippling of all in-person K–12 education as too dangerous to ever repeat. Just the educational losses alone — 15,000 students completely AWOL in Los Angeles, millions without high-speed Internet access at home, and those doing school online losing between three months and one year of learning — are unacceptable.

    And yet in August, adults in power ignored the strong recommendation of the American Association of Pediatrics and the CDC, and 74 percent of the 100 largest school districts returned to school online. Now it’s November, and schools that had worked so hard to deliver protocol-laden in-person learning are shutting their doors again, including ones in Connecticut and Iowa.

    High-school science teacher Alexis Zieler in Michigan told me that virtual high school is “a disaster” that is working well only for very few students. Of her 35 students in virtual biology class, 30 are struggling, she said. The accountability and motivation she provides in spades inside her classroom are gone. So too is her arsenal of creative teaching methods.

    “There are no varied learning styles in virtual at all,” Zieler says. “My student who is tied for valedictorian, she’s really bright, and a hard worker. She gets nothing from those videos. It’s only working for students whose learning style is in sort of a Goldilocks sweet spot.”

    Jackie Hall, a mom of four in California’s Bay Area, told me that virtual school for her eleven-year-old son who has an IEP for dyslexia made him feel like a failure, and online teachers offered no extra attention or help.

    “By the end of the day, he was a disaster,” Hall says. “His attitude toward everything was bad — it was heartbreaking. And each day he was just falling farther and farther behind.”

    After two weeks of virtual schooling this fall, she pulled him out and is now homeschooling him — “something I never thought I could or would do,” she says.

    In Northern Virginia, mom of four boys Veronika Cowen told me that virtual elementary school is “horrible,” especially for her kindergartener, who “refuses to do any work virtually.” Further, Cowen’s own goals as a parent have derailed.

    “My biggest accomplishment as a modern-day parent was that I managed to keep my boys not addicted to screen . . . till now,” she says. “Now I am supposed to keep them staring at screens all day long.”

    These are common woes of the dozens of parents I’ve talked with who feel frustrated, stuck, and angry. But they’re also problems on the surface; the underbelly of homebound, virtual learning and isolation is much uglier.

    Experts are calling the pandemic a perfect storm for abusers and pedophiles, whose access to children in 2020 is unprecedented. Last month the FBI and Department of Justice issued a joint warning asking parents to wake up to predators’ “increased access to children,” stating, “Parents don’t know all the apps or how to use them, but sexual predators do. They know where the kids are and how to reach them.” Law enforcement is reporting record levels of online child sexual crimes worldwide, including in Scotland and Louisiana. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children says a good rule of thumb for school-age kids is “the expectation . . . that they are only connected with people they know in real life.”

    But family violence can get all too real for virtual learners isolated at home......
    Look what they teach in school now...the world is melting due to climate change, people with a penis are girls and those with vaginas are boys, if you disagree no one will like you on Instagram or facepage or tweets, America is a systemically racist country, police are bad and thugs are good. The creeps on the left are an infection on America. That's the REAL pandemic.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Yakuda View Post
    Look what they teach in school now...the world is melting due to climate change, people with a penis are girls and those with vaginas are boys, if you disagree no one will like you on Instagram or facepage or tweets, America is a systemically racist country, police are bad and thugs are good. The creeps on the left are an infection on America. That's the REAL pandemic.
    That is not what they teach in school.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Nordberg View Post
    That is not what they teach in school.
    Lie. That IS what they teach in school. They teach that the world is melting due to climate change, people with a penis are girls and those with vaginas are boys, if you disagree no one will like you on Instagram or facepage or tweets, America is a systemically racist country, police are bad and thugs are good.
    "The atmosphere is among the factors that determines the Earth's atmosphere." --ZenMode
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    Quote Originally Posted by anatta View Post
    As a mom of five children, I’m acutely aware that this decision increases the burden our youngest generation is bearing to control a virus that rarely makes them sick. Furthermore, experts say children are not driving transmission of COVID-19, especially in school settings.
    https://www.nationalreview.com/2020/...20COVID%20Kids

    The outbreak challenges the resilience of vulnerable children as it increases in children’s environments the number of already existing risks . . . and reduces the number of protective forces,” states a report published in August by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “The pandemic and the associated policy responses of confinement and social distancing touch on almost every part of children’s worlds.”

    Right now, kids are more vulnerable to education loss, increased risk of family violence, loneliness, derailed trajectories including higher drop-out rates, depression, suicide, and increased attacks by online sexual predators.

    The spring should have been the canary in the mine, exposing the sudden crippling of all in-person K–12 education as too dangerous to ever repeat. Just the educational losses alone — 15,000 students completely AWOL in Los Angeles, millions without high-speed Internet access at home, and those doing school online losing between three months and one year of learning — are unacceptable.

    But your president told you it's a hoax!

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    Quote Originally Posted by BidenPresident View Post
    But your president told you it's a hoax!
    The virus is not a hoax. The panic put out by the Democrats and Fake News is.
    "The atmosphere is among the factors that determines the Earth's atmosphere." --ZenMode
    "Donald has failed in almost every endeavor he has attempted. " --floridafan
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    "no slavery is forcing another into labor" -archives
    "Evs are much safer from fires" -- Nordberg
    "Abortion has killed no one." -- LurchAddams

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    https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.usa...amp/6341715002

    In many cases, schools are closing because too many teachers are quarantined or infected with COVID-19. Others are responding to high rates of virus transmission in their communities.Kentucky's governor announced a statewide closure of schools to take effect Monday, a move that followed Michigan closing all high school classrooms and New York City schools – the largest district in the country – moving back to all-remote learning.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Phantasmal View Post
    https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.usa...amp/6341715002

    [FONT="]In many cases, schools are closing because too many teachers are quarantined or infected with COVID-19. Others are responding to high rates of virus transmission in their communities.[/FONT][FONT="] [/FONT]Kentucky's governor announced a statewide closure of schools to take effect Monday, a move that followed Michigan closing all high school classrooms and New York City schools – the largest district in the country – moving back to all-remote learning.
    where do you see teachers being quarantined as a problem? kids are a poor source of COVID transmission

    Now add up your factors against what kids are going thru -not even close

    Right now, kids are more vulnerable to education loss, increased risk of family violence, loneliness, derailed trajectories including higher drop-out rates, depression, suicide, and increased attacks by online sexual predators.

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    Quote Originally Posted by anatta View Post
    where do you see teachers being quarantined as a problem? kids are a poor source of COVID transmission

    Now add up your factors against what kids are going thru -not even close
    They don’t care.
    Coup has started. First of many steps. Impeachment will follow ultimately~WB attorney Mark Zaid, January 2017

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    Quote Originally Posted by Darth Omar View Post
    They don’t care.
    apparently not. No reason to lock down grade schools

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    Quote Originally Posted by Phantasmal View Post
    https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.usa...amp/6341715002

    [FONT="]In many cases, schools are closing because too many teachers are quarantined or infected with COVID-19. Others are responding to high rates of virus transmission in their communities.[/FONT][FONT="] [/FONT]Kentucky's governor announced a statewide closure of schools to take effect Monday, a move that followed Michigan closing all high school classrooms and New York City schools – the largest district in the country – moving back to all-remote learning.
    Other than infecting their teachers (and adults at home), the younger kids don't seem to be transmitting the virus as much as the middle and h.s. kids. Closing the schools though becomes necessary, like you pointed out, when they don't have enough teachers and/or subs. It really does suck for the younger kids and their parents as well. There is no good answer.

    Two of our neighbors are retired teachers. We've been wondering how to help a new family who moved on our road during the summer. They are in the process of building a home and are living in a very cramped little RV trailer on another neighbor's property. There are four kids; I think that the oldest is ~10 or so. The mom works in a nursing home and the kids were going to our small school up here until it closed due to the pandemic. They don't have Internet so they can't learn remotely. We are all older and don't feel safe risking in-person help due to their mom's employment situation. Do you have any suggestions how we could help them out w/o getting exposed?
    "Conservatism is the blind and fear-filled worship of dead radicals." -- Mark Twain

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    Quote Originally Posted by ThatOwlWoman View Post
    Other than infecting their teachers (and adults at home), the younger kids don't seem to be transmitting the virus as much as the middle and h.s. kids. Closing the schools though becomes necessary, like you pointed out, when they don't have enough teachers and/or subs. It really does suck for the younger kids and their parents as well. There is no good answer.

    Two of our neighbors are retired teachers. We've been wondering how to help a new family who moved on our road during the summer. They are in the process of building a home and are living in a very cramped little RV trailer on another neighbor's property. There are four kids; I think that the oldest is ~10 or so. The mom works in a nursing home and the kids were going to our small school up here until it closed due to the pandemic. They don't have Internet so they can't learn remotely. We are all older and don't feel safe risking in-person help due to their mom's employment situation. Do you have any suggestions how we could help them out w/o getting exposed?
    Agreed. Another excellent point.

    What comrade dookie is foolish, or purposefully, overlooking is that it isn't the children who are most at risk. If all the teachers, coaches, admin staff, bus drivers and janitors were robots who could be hosed down every class with disinfectant, it wouldn't be a problem. Since that's obviously not the case, then the best way to regain control of this pandemic is to minimize transmission of the disease in all vectors.

    Quote Originally Posted by anatta View Post
    fucking dolt. you cant even read about transmissions from kids
    God bless America and those who defend our Constitution.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dutch Uncle View Post
    Agreed. Another excellent point.

    What comrade dookie is foolish, or purposefully, overlooking is that it isn't the children who are most at risk. If all the teachers, coaches, admin staff, bus drivers and janitors were robots who could be hosed down every class with disinfectant, it wouldn't be a problem. Since that's obviously not the case, then the best way to regain control of this pandemic is to minimize transmission of the disease in all vectors.
    Yep. I was thinking today that this pandemic and why the way it's been approached in this country is so fucked up. Remember when you were a kid and there was a toy or some other object that you desperately wanted? Instead of spending your allowance and birthday money on little stuff, you sacrificed and saved until you had enough for the desired object.

    Instead of shutting down *everything* for a month or so, and mandating masks and social distancing nationwide (the sacrifice), we just behaved like spoiled brats... and now look.
    "Conservatism is the blind and fear-filled worship of dead radicals." -- Mark Twain

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    Quote Originally Posted by ThatOwlWoman View Post
    Yep. I was thinking today that this pandemic and why the way it's been approached in this country is so fucked up. Remember when you were a kid and there was a toy or some other object that you desperately wanted? Instead of spending your allowance and birthday money on little stuff, you sacrificed and saved until you had enough for the desired object.

    Instead of shutting down *everything* for a month or so, and mandating masks and social distancing nationwide (the sacrifice), we just behaved like spoiled brats... and now look.
    It is fucked up. While America is often slow to rise to the occasion, history proves it has always done so.

    The events of our times are another reason, despite all the shit I've given them, that I believe Millennials will become the Greatest Generation of the 21st Century. All the elements are there just like the 20th century's Greatest Generation: the greed, the selfishness, the poverty, the harm to the economic system and the wars.
    God bless America and those who defend our Constitution.

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