Treppen wrote: » It's unofficial though. Regular unions should be doing this survey
deiseindublin wrote: » I hope to God TUI fight that, would be so unfair.
mirrorwall14 wrote: » Yeah it is odd they haven’t got there yet. It’s a big announcement
byhookorbycrook wrote: » Just as well most of us won’t be paying to read an “ opinion piece “ then.
teachinggal123 wrote: » https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/fintan-o-toole-lack-of-preparation-for-reopening-schools-is-terrifying-1.4309042?mode=amp&fbclid=IwAR2ZL-SCXLQgVo2OKi61fwK9SqtNiEjblFgBcriB7S9au5GXg-yPXU563U8 Behind a paywall - not a happy read for teachers
Will Yam wrote: » You won’t get any. They aren’t allowed here.
wirelessdude01 wrote: » I await all the 'soft' teacher, suck it up, get on with it comments.
linguist wrote: » Apologies if this has already been said but it's certainly how I'm thinking. There's a good way to go yet. Firstly, we fear the Dept disregarding cautious NPHET guidelines. There are good reasons to hope that wouldn't happen. I would imagine the AG would advise against it from the perspective that it could open the State up to legal claims. I also imagine insurers would back out of cover if public health guidelines were not being observed. However, if it gets to a point where an unsafe opening of schools is proposed, any teacher is free to go to their own GP and discuss their concerns and those are, of course, psychological as well as physical. And if you feel your physical or mental health is put at risk by the proposed reopening plans you're perfectly entitled to ask your GP to sign you off sick. I am certainly thinking along those lines. Nobody has to be a martyr here. I'm conscious that there's over a month to go and people could worry themselves sick. We all need to mind ourselves. There are good reasons to believe that a cautious return will happen for the reasons I've outlined but ultimately we are all entitled to seek our own medical advice and I really think that's something that teachers should be prepared to do.
pandoraj09 wrote: » My sister is on the BOM in her PP school and they have a number of students not being sent back to "normal" school when it reopens due to underlying health issues either themselves or parents. The school now has to work out some way of providing tuition for these students. Our school building is round and the classrooms actually get narrower the further up each room you go, so social distancing impossible especially as kids enter/leave the room pushing/shoving. How will it work with SNAs? They'll hardly be able to sit right beside a student now, usually in our school sharing a book with them too. A lot of kids won't do PE. They "forget" their gear and usually sit huddled together at the door of the sports hall looking at phones. We have a designated teacher system where we send troublesome kids to a certain teacher where they sit until the bell goes. That can't happen now.....Every time I think about it I can think of more and more problems.
km79 wrote: » “Widening of opening hours “ is jumping out at me .......
km79 wrote: » I had been checking rte , indo and Irish times I also notice they have not publish results of vforT survey They could not published the student one calling for LC cancellation quick enough !
mirrorwall14 wrote: » https://merrionstreet.ie/en/News-Room/Releases/Minister_Harris_announces_€168_million_package_for_third_level_institutions_and_students.htmlhttps://www.google.ie/amp/s/www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-40019732.html%3ftype=amp
km79 wrote: » There has been no mention of the latest guidelines in the media ?
Simeon Mysterious Minibike wrote: » But it actually applies to a lot of FE colleges based in post primary schools. These are actually quite common across the ETB sector - not just a small number of schools. Especially in disadvantaged areas. So this distancing and reduced interaction will be expected to happen in the exact same classrooms and corridors as the pp classes, during the same school day. At 9.00 a teacher may have a class with 6th Year Biology in Lab 3 with 24 18-year-old students packed in, banging elbows. No masks. At 10.00 the same teacher might have a class with QQI Level 5 Lab Skills for a pre-Uni Science course. Most students probably 18-19 years old. Suddenly, it's 2m distancing if teaching, masks plus visor recommended if doing group work.
Rosita wrote: » The two-metre advisory for an environment which might as well be a different planet, space-wise, to the average school really raises the bar on Post-Primary school returns.