My daughter’s (2nd grade) classmate tested positive. She sits at his lunch table. They made her and the other students at the table stay home pending a neg test on x date, after 2 days of still going to school after the “exposure”. However, they didn’t make her two sisters, who are in 3rd grade stay home, which is hilarious to me… What I need help with, is info. When I approach the school about this, I need informational ammo. Reputable studies about asymptomatic spread being false, masks not working, pcr false positives. If anyone can please link some in the comments, it would be very helpful. Thanks
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The fact you draw some imaginary line between home schooling and living out in the country shows you really don’t know much about this.
The point being that the plan is only good if you dont have to lift a finger. Generally homeschooling isnt even that hard to implement. Even unschooling is better than government run schools just for subtracting all of the negatives associated with those institutions. And unschooling takes almost no effort. And it says so much that unschooling students do as well at standard tests as average gov schoolers. And a move or job change is maybe all thats needed to get rid of most of the other barriers to homeschooling.
The biggest thing that actually prevents people from doing it are false stereotypes.
No it’s literally what you wrote.