Coronavirus Thread (Off Topic, Politics) (129 Viewers)

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
How would that actually work in reality?

I had in mind year groups being in on a fortnightly rotation weighted most heavily in favour of the senior year groups, allowing practical subjects to be delivered close to normal and the rooms to be deep cleaned at the end of the day. In most schools these subjects tend to be in the same block making implementation easier
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I had in mind year groups being in on a fortnightly rotation weighted most heavily in favour of the senior year groups, allowing practical subjects to be delivered close to normal and the rooms to be deep cleaned at the end of the day. In most schools these subjects tend to be in the same block making implementation easier

So they would be in school all day? In universities surely people going would be from separate halls and spread the virus anyway
 
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Deleted member 5849

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So they would be in school all day? In universities surely people going would be from separate halls and spread the virus anyway
Universities are able to come up with justifications, academically, why you need access to other items such as the rare books, archives etc. Got to be all or nothing with them, really.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
So they would be in school all day? In universities surely people going would be from separate halls and spread the virus anyway

They would be in school all day for a couple of days in a fortnight at most. Universities would be able to manage this more easily and just send home those in non-practical courses to free up and collapse accommodation space for the (small) remainder. You can't teach Science/DT/Art/Drama/Medicine remotely all year whereas you can for the bulk of other subjects
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Universities are able to come up with justifications, academically, why you need access to other items such as the rare books, archives etc. Got to be all or nothing with them, really.

That is surely much easier to do by appointment than it is to deliver predominantly practical subjects that require labs?
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
They would be in school all day for a couple of days in a fortnight at most. Universities would be able to manage this more easily and just send home those in non-practical courses to free up and collapse accommodation space for the (small) remainder. You can't teach Science/DT/Art/Drama/Medicine remotely all year whereas you can for the bulk of other subjects

If parents were working and had children specialising in science and others not how would they be able to make this work?
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
If parents were working and had children specialising in science and others not how would they be able to make this work?

It could work in a similar way to the arrangements in the summer term. Likely to be less of an issue due to more parents working from home
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
It could work in a similar way to the arrangements in the summer term. Likely to be less of an issue due to more parents working from home

What if one works in a factory and another is a nurse?
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
What if one works in a factory and another is a nurse?

If we're down to essential workers only who can't get care then they would be entitled to come in. I should add that in a school of approximately 2000, we had maybe 15-20 needing such provision in the summer term. It isn't a deal breaker and I think you'd agree with the overriding view that it isn't fair on practical subjects to not be able to do practical work for a whole year
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
The social, mental and educational damage is too great.....at risk registers and referrals thru the roof.....


....we've simply gotta find a way to keep them open imho
You could have stuck an extra week on the half term to begin with, and just made sure those Tory c**** provide food for those that need it. No impact educationally whatsoever.
 

Kieranp96

Well-Known Member
You could have stuck an extra week on the half term to begin with, and just made sure those Tory c**** provide food for those that need it. No impact educationally whatsoever.
Lets be honest if you can't afford to feed your child you're doing something incredibly wrong.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
It’s got to be full lockdowns over the holidays and maybe extended half terms, so you get a two week lockdown every month and a half or so (if the data shows you need it obviously).

If they were smart they’d have reorganised school terms with maybe slightly longer semesters and longer breaks. Invested in remote learning, ideally a National solution (whole bunch of
with as little impact on teacher workload as possible and allow WFH where possible for students to reduce class sizes. Practical subjects in as BSB suggests with sensible precautions. Push exams back a couple of months and hope we can claw back F2F time in the summer.

Instead we’ve done... nothing.
 

jimmyhillsfanclub

Well-Known Member
You could have stuck an extra week on the half term to begin with, and just made sure those Tory c**** provide food for those that need it. No impact educationally whatsoever.

Indeed....and if you scroll a few pages back....you'll see i suggested just that.

They've fucked it big time.....so now it's probably all about damage limitation until an extended xmas hols as we watch that bolted horse ride over the horizon
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Food bank stats from the Trussell Trust showed a significant rise up to March, you can guess it'll have gone through the roof by this time when the next stats come out. By all means lazily blame the individuals en masse but have a look here first

 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
You get benifits if you work zero hours, child support including, but nowa days they probaly spend £30 on new nails rather than food.

How would you know? And again, why should the child be left to suffer if you're right and everybody who can't afford food is a waster?
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
You get benifits if you work zero hours, child support including, but nowa days they probaly spend £30 on new nails rather than food.
Fuck me - you’ve swallowed the Daily Mail propaganda well and truly.
Zero hours contracts, UC that isn’t fit for purpose, whilst you get screwed to pieces by shitty landlords because you’re never getting on the property ladder..... but it’s all about that 0.0001% that try and cheat the system. Bet you don’t give nearly as much of a fuck about tax evading talking billions out of the country’s finances.

Ultimately - the child is always innocent.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Food bank stats from the Trussell Trust showed a significant rise up to March, you can guess it'll have gone through the roof by this time when the next stats come out. By all means lazily blame the individuals en masse but have a look here first


Why do people always get lazier when the Tories are in power? 🤔
 

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