Azmazing · @Azmazing1
97 followers · 23 posts · Server mas.to
Azmazing · @Azmazing1
97 followers · 22 posts · Server mas.to

Monica Velez: "These school resources mean the most to families"

"Consolidating schools won’t fix the district’s budget problems, Jones said. administrators have projected could save $20 million, but that’s a rough estimate. The savings from school consolidations may not be immediate and won’t come until two to five years later, he added."

seattletimes.com/education-lab

#education #seattlenews #schoolclosures #seattlepublicschools #seattle

Last updated 1 year ago

Luis M. Rocha · @lmrocha
199 followers · 329 posts · Server qoto.org

Very well done. Uses only US data, but I wish people in other places would be more careful passing along these accepted wisdom myths.

youtu.be/-h5xyGdVfvo?si=wjvBIl

#pandemic #mentalhealth #schoolclosures #COVID

Last updated 1 year ago

Azmazing · @Azmazing1
95 followers · 58 posts · Server mas.to

"Despite Budget Shortfalls, Still Planning For A Bright Future"

on : I read this to mean closures are inevitable:

SPS "also needs to consider different types of cuts, including school consolidations. To date, officials have chosen to postpone this difficult decision for one year, with a plan to engage the community beforehand."

seattlemedium.com/despite-budg

#seattlenews #seattle #schoolclosures #brentjones #seattlepublicschools

Last updated 1 year ago

Azmazing · @Azmazing1
95 followers · 56 posts · Server mas.to

"Despite Budget Shortfalls, Still Planning For A Bright Future"

-Jones on : I read this to mean closures are inevitable:

SPS "also needs to consider different types of cuts, including school consolidations. To date, officials have chosen to postpone this difficult decision for one year, with a plan to engage the community beforehand."

seattlemedium.com/despite-budg

#seattlenews #seattle #schoolclosures #brent #seattlepublicschools

Last updated 1 year ago

Azmazing · @Azmazing1
96 followers · 49 posts · Server mas.to
Azmazing · @Azmazing1
96 followers · 44 posts · Server mas.to
Auscandoc · @auscandoc
964 followers · 8558 posts · Server med-mastodon.com

jamanetwork.com/journals/jaman “Prior to the , monthly incidences were typically higher during the , but during the spring of 2020, coinciding with , they were substantially lower.

This study’s findings suggest that the unexpected decrease in among and after school closures supports hypotheses that suicidality is associated with the US calendar.”

#pandemic #schoolyear #schoolclosures #suicidality #children #adolescents #school

Last updated 1 year ago

· @Newstarget
2126 followers · 19470 posts · Server brighteon.social
· @NaturalNews
5981 followers · 28001 posts · Server brighteon.social
MikeDunnAuthor · @MikeDunnAuthor
958 followers · 1798 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Christian Parenti’s recent article on the Grayzone, “How Covid lockdowns primed the current financial crisis,” is ageist, ableist, and wrong in so many ways.

He is correct that U.S. lockdowns early in the pandemic contributed to supply chain problems, which in turn contributed to the inflation, and even the bank failures, that we’re seeing today. But this was only one of a myriad of factors that played into this, including price gouging by greedy business owners. And the U.S. “Lockdown Left” can hardly be blamed for China’s lockdowns, which were actual lockdowns, compared to the weakly enforced and temporary closures and shutdowns we saw in the U.S., and which probably contributed far more to international supply chain problems than the U.S. “lockdowns” did.

Parenti is also correct to criticize the “left” for its hypocrisy, dishonesty and mistakes, particularly since he comes from the left, himself. But the biggest cause, and the biggest beneficiary, of the current financial crisis is the capitalist class, not the left. It was the capitalist-run Fed, not the left, that jacked up interest rates. Capitalist bankers, not the left, who made risky investments and refused to maintain safer amounts of liquidity. Capitalist politicians (particularly Trump), not the left, who watered down Dodd-Frank, making it easier for banks to fail.

He is also correct that the “lockdowns” dragged on longer than was required. But incorrect that they were unnecessary and didn’t work. They were implemented before there were life-saving vaccines, and at a time when Fauci was telling us masks didn’t work. Consequently, it was much easier to catch the disease, and people were much more likely to die from it. And numerous studies have shown that the closures saved tens of thousands of lives. Nevertheless, when my school district returned to in-person learning last year, when we had a strictly enforced mandatory masking policy, and a 95% vaccination rate for students and staff, we didn’t have a single covid outbreak in any of our schools.

Parenti suggests that Covid is not a serious, or a particularly deadly, disease. Kind of depends on your perspective, and your willingness to ignore things like Long Covid, and the increased risk of developing heart and lung disease, or diabetes (cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/long-c, & journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.11). It is true that younger people are less likely to die from it than are older people. But many still do die, and the overall mortality rates for children and young adults have increased significantly because of it (jamanetwork.com/journals/jaman). And what about seniors; people with disabilities or comorbidities; and low wage front line workers who are especially at risk of hospitalization and death? Why should they be the only ones who have to take special precautions, and who must bear the brunt of the suffering and mortality, when it’s younger people, particularly teens, who contribute the most to covid’s proliferation in communities? Indeed, Parenti’s claims that covid is not an especially deadly disease, and that “focused protection,” like that proposed in the Great Barrington Declaration, are ageist and ableist arguments.
And he is wrong, like most of the media, about the terrible effects of school closures on teen mental health. Yes, it was bad. But nowhere near as bad as the effects of losing a primary care giver to the pandemic, which happened to over 100,000 U.S. children, or the effects of covid-related financial stress, as shown in this study: cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/survey-study-ties-covid-related-family-financial-problems-child-stress-worry. Likewise, global mental health is not significantly worse now than before the pandemic according to this study: Https://www.bmj.com/content/38

#covid #pandemic #suicide #teen #schoolclosures #mentalhealth #depression #stress #anxiety #ageism #ableism #GrayZone #lockdown #supplychain #inflation #bankfailures #pricegouging #china #capitalism #MaskUp #CovidIsNotOver #fauci #vaccines

Last updated 1 year ago

MikeDunnAuthor · @MikeDunnAuthor
929 followers · 1697 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Here it is, a study that shows thst the epidemic in worsening teen mental health has been due to family financial struggles associated with the pandemic, not School closures.

cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/survey

#covid #pandemic #suicide #teen #schoolclosures #mentalhealth #depression #stress #anxiety

Last updated 1 year ago

Okla.Social · @OklaBot
38 followers · 1353 posts · Server okla.social
Okla.Social · @OklaBot
38 followers · 1353 posts · Server okla.social
Okla.Social · @OklaBot
38 followers · 1353 posts · Server okla.social
Okla.Social · @OklaBot
38 followers · 1353 posts · Server okla.social
Barevalley · @barevalley
0 followers · 75 posts · Server mas.to

@tigresseleanor

History will recall closing schools as a big mistake.


#schoolclosures #covid

Last updated 2 years ago

Carolannie · @carolannie
1 followers · 11 posts · Server mstdn.social

"Looking back, closing schools was probably an effective way of cutting SARS-CoV-2 transmission prior to the widespread availability of safe and effective vaccines, Johnson said. That’s a key piece of information for policymakers to keep in mind when another pandemic comes along."



ama-assn.org/delivering-care/p

#pandemicpublicpolicies #pandemicmitigation #schoolclosures #COVID19

Last updated 2 years ago

Carolannie · @carolannie
1 followers · 11 posts · Server mstdn.social

"Looking back, closing schools was probably an effective way of cutting SARS-CoV-2 transmission prior to the widespread availability of safe and effective vaccines, Johnson said. That’s a key piece of information for policymakers to keep in mind when another pandemic comes along."

ama-assn.org/delivering-care/p

#pandemicpublicpolicies #pandemicmitigation #schoolclosures #COVID19

Last updated 2 years ago

Tracy Rosenberg · @twrling
315 followers · 213 posts · Server sfba.social