Gatling wrote: » What I don't get in all of this ,it was decided to keep schools closed for safety reasons
byhookorbycrook wrote: » Fits, I’m so sorry to read of your struggles, they must be mirrored county wide . I hope the support you need can be sorted quickly and properly.
paddyirish23 wrote: » I'm amazed and actually shocked that some teachers of SD kids don't understand or don't seem to care what affect all this is having on kids, can't keep blaming their unions and government for everything. Online learning is out for us. Time for PUP payment if unions keep refusing.
paddyirish23 wrote: » I feel your pain in this, my son and daughter have special needs. Son in primary daughter not of age yet. Since March has been a nightmare and beyond stressful. His regression is heartbreaking. What I don't get is how ireland is the only country in the EU that have shut all schools. How they every other country keep most of the SE schools open but not us? I get some parents don't want to send their kids back in but some of can't keep this up while working. The uncertainty is draining. We started social stories this week again in the hope that he'll be going back to school but now will have to change again. What people that don't have kids in this situation don't understand is routine is everything. It's the difference between a good day and a very bad day. Reading last night Norma told unions that health experts tried to get it across that it's safe but we're having none of it. If this is the case then I now have a real issue with teachers and their unions. Last point in a long post (sorry) I'm amazed and actually shocked that some teachers of SD kids don't understand or don't seem to care what affect all this is having on kids, can't keep blaming their unions and government for everything. Online learning is out for us. Time for PUP payment if unions keep refusing.
Murple wrote: » You said that ‘since March has been a nightmare and beyond stressful. His regression has been heartbreaking’- can I ask was there an improvement from September to December when the school was open? Did your child have access to something like July provision in the summer? How would you manage during a normal summer break? Are there additional services, camps, respite etc available? These are genuine questions as I feel what’s happening here is the consequence of a much deeper issue and that is that the authorities think ‘school place, box ticked’ when it comes to children with additional needs. With regard to Norma and the health experts, the unions asked for up to date data and were given data from last term when number were much, much lower and when community transmission was much lower. There was no data given about cases in children in January...and for good reason. It wouldn’t have fit with the narrative they were trying to portray. The health experts said as long as we followed public health advice, schools were safe. Public health advice being cough etiquette, hand washing and social distancing- these are particularly difficult in special needs settings. Every special needs school in the north in term 1 had cases of Covid. A number that opened fully after Christmas have now switched to blended learning. Many crèches here have been closed due to Covid outbreaks. I read a poster on this forum describing their child getting Covid in crèche and bringing it home and now the family have it. Several staff and children in the crèche were affected also. These events don’t fit with the mantra ‘schools are safe’. I’m not even sure what ‘schools are safe’ even means anymore. Any place where people mix is a risk at the moment. I also think it is unfair to say that teachers of children with SN don’t understand or don’t care about the effect this is having on the children. Do you think that teachers and SNA should disregard their concerns about themselves and their own families? I have huge sympathy for the pupils I teach who are finding it hard but my primary concerns are around the 2 people I live with, both high risk, one who would be unlikely to survive Covid. I also worry about myself getting Covid as it would leave me unable to share in the care for one of those people and that being left entirely on the shoulders of someone else. I genuinely hope something can be agreed on that will provide the families concerned with some relief. I don’t believe either minister involved was acting out of concern for the people involved but rather out of a desire for political kudos. If they had been more measured in their approach and waited for the right time, I think it could have gone very smoothly. But trying to force the issue when numbers were very high, community transmission is out of control, testing was pushed to its limits and close contacts weren’t being tested was not right time or the safe time to mobilise about 40,000 children from 4-18 as well as teachers, SNA, ancillary staff, bus drivers etc.
paddyirish23 wrote: » When you ask was there improvement when he went back to school in September, you have no idea how far he regressed. Going back to school was another stress due to it not being part of his routine since March. Summer holidays are pre planned in so far as time is booked off work to manage at home. Supports were pretty much zero. Being on waiting list after waiting list for yrs and now early intervention teams are impossible to get to as they are all closed so don't get me started on supports. I get that teachers and SNAs might not want to go back to protect loved ones but the rest of us have to work go to work. They either want to be classed as essential workers or not. If they are then back to school they should go. Other countries have a much worse rate of infection and yet they have schools open.
indolent wrote: » Is it possible children will be in school before the midterm would you say ? Unbelievable the department didn't plan for this eventuality.
BonsaiKitten wrote: » Given that there's two weeks to go I think it's very unlikely - having them in for one week and then out again could be very disruptive for the children.
Gatling wrote: » Highly unlikely but with the current situation with the government and minister if could well happen , In my case I'd saying no I'll send her back after midterm and hope we get to get to June without any problems
fits wrote: Really hope something can be done for those who want it.
BonsaiKitten wrote: » True but I reckon Norma and Josepha are under very close supervision in those meetings now! Micheal has learned his lesson about letting them out unsupervised. The Dept are a wildcard though. Anyway I think many parents would be like you and not send them back for the sake of a week.