Why is a sick, coughing child with a runny nose at school?
If a parent sent their kid to school that way, I guess I can't really fault the teacher for trying to halt the spread of infection, especially if there is a flu risk.
My kid is one that had allergies and asthma, and I'm waiting for his first cough to cause waves of hysteria at the school.![]()
No, I do not want my kids wearing masks at school. If you are that concerned about their health then call me at home and I will come get them. I would be very angry.
My kid is one that had allergies and asthma, and I'm waiting for his first cough to cause waves of hysteria at the school.![]()
It seems like if a child has allergies, it would be marked somewhere in his or her school information and probably would have been noticed by someone at some point in the past. If the teacher has no way to know for sure that the problem is allergies, and can't send the child home, then I see no issue with the mask. With the swine flu floating around, its not worth it to the other children to have a child spreading their germs all over the place just so they don't look a little silly with a mask on for one day. If it truly is allergies then after that one day, the parent can contact the school and give the child's Dr's information showing that the child has allergies. One day wearing a flippin paper mask will not scar the child for life. Without having any information on whether the child has allergies or not, he or she has no choice but to try to protect the rest of the class.
Why is a sick, coughing child with a runny nose at school?
If a parent sent their kid to school that way, I guess I can't really fault the teacher for trying to halt the spread of infection, especially if there is a flu risk.
What she said.
That being said...frankly, I think the swine flu hysteria is ridiculous. Swine flu has been around for as long as the flu has been around...for God's sakes, I remember it back in the 70's when I was in school.
But, we live in a litiginous society....
So, what's the school to do? They already have to "parent" in so many ways (prior to schoool day care, after school care, summer programs, subsidized meals to name a few things that go on in my area) due to lack of parenting at home....
On the one side, you have the parents who would be incensed if their child were singled out. On the other side, you have the parents who would be incensed if their child caught Swine Flu, especially if they were to find out later that some little Swine Flu Suzy spent 2 days in class coughing and spewing all over everyone. So guess who gets caught in the middle and sued either way? That's right...the school.
Then we have the group of people whose kids have allergies that mimic Swine Flu. So many more people have allergies these days than ever did...I wonder why that is? Ragweed,pollen etc. have also been around for years, and save for a few kids I knew as a child, I don't recall anyone ever having allergies so bad that the symptoms mimicked Swine Flu.
My recommendation for those of you who have allergic children....provide a doctor's note to the school that your child is allergic and may exhibit sneezing, coughing, runny noses and other symptoms that may seem like cold or flu symptoms but are, in reality, allergy symptoms and NOT contagious.
My recommendation for those of you who have sick children...keep them home. Even if that is an inconvenience to you.
I agree but do not think that a cold is a reason to keep a child home.
I agree. That's where the rubber hits the road. If a parent kept a child home for every sniffle, the school board would take the parents to court for truancy.
Ok, a realistic question here, and maybe some teachers can chime in here: as a teacher by trade, I'm familiar with a lot of child behaviors in the classroom...
how much work do you think will really get done with children wearing masks in the classroom? In the lower grades, I think it would be very distracting for both the children and the teachers.
It the H1N1 flu is going to spread as easily as they say it might, schools/parents will be encountering something they never have before. Both sides will need to take actions that they never have previously. Policies/procedures will have to change and both sides will need to be flexible.
Schools will have to find ways to help stop the spread of the virus and parents will have to be willing to keep sick children home.
I'm not anti-mask, just thinking it wouldn't be realistic for younger school children. Any parent who thinks it should be required might want to walk a mile in their child's or teacher's shoes for a school day...
Just looking at it from that perspective...
I agree. That's where the rubber hits the road. If a parent kept a child home for every sniffle, the school board would take the parents to court for truancy.
I agree but do not think that a cold is a reason to keep a child home.