Anonymous ID: 45ce03 March 17, 2020, 6:05 p.m. No.8456172   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8456033

 

Kansas state covid-19 webpage states 16 test results. Guess the education of children is not important, sure kids will stay inside at home for the next two months.

The most impotant thing is that state government employees and teachers are being paid without that evil requirement of work.

https://govstatus.egov.com/coronavirus

Anonymous ID: 45ce03 March 17, 2020, 6:12 p.m. No.8456256   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8456033

Kansas school closure article

 

https://www.kcur.org/post/every-school-kid-kansas-was-just-told-stay-home-because-coronavirus

 

TOPEKA, Kansas — Gov. Laura Kelly on Tuesday ordered all of the state’s schools closed for the remainder of the academic year, taking her most dramatic action yet to stem the spread of COVID-19 in Kansas.

 

The governor’s decision came while all the state’s schools were shut down either for spring break or to slow the spread of the new coronavirus — some under orders from county health departments. In particular, the largest school systems in Kansas had either moved to online instruction or stretched out those spring breaks.

 

“The reality of this pandemic is that it cannot be controlled statewide if school buildings remain open,” Kelly said in an afternoon news conference in the Statehouse.

 

She said state officials and local school districts had begun working on ways to make remote learning work, even as she acknowledged online classes will not match what happens in schoolrooms. Her order also applies to private schools. Kelly said the new school year should start as normal in August. Just under half a million Kansas students will be affected by the decision.

 

Health departments in Douglas, Franklin and Shawnee Counties closed schools for two weeks. Riley County, home to Kansas State University and the biggest military base in Kansas, ordered Manhattan schools closed until the end of March.

 

Some educators worried how rural parts of the state could continue teaching their K-12 students when internet service was unavailable in so many homes. For instance, Washington County Schools estimates about 30% of its students have no internet at home.

 

That digital divide, between the haves and have-nots of the Kansas school districts, underscored an inequity in the state. That could become more pronounced when institutions shut down so that Kansans can try to avoid infection in the fast-moving pandemic.

 

Educators are also concerned about how to teach their youngest students remotely, especially when it comes to online lessons.

 

“How do you deliver a preschool curriculum online?” said Denise O’Dea, superintendent for Washington County Schools. “I don’t even know if it’s feasible.”

 

State education officials say their remote learning efforts won’t be as strong as what they can do in a classroom. But they hope it will prevent students’ educations from sliding further back without any instruction to fill the gap.

 

“It will provide us a bridge during these difficult times to bring us back when there is a sense of normal,” said Education Commissioner Randy Watson.

 

Kelly’s task force will release recommendations for school districts Wednesday evening, but school districts can decide what, if any, remote learning they’ll provide.

 

What that means for high school seniors looking to graduate remains under discussion. State officials asked school boards to look at their local graduation requirements to see what can be done to make sure students finish the year with a legitimate high school diploma.

 

The prospect of closing schools also raised worries about replacing lunches provided to the neediest students and whether poorer areas of the state could adapt as well as wealthier areas such as Johnson County. School districts across that suburban Kansas City county, the most populous in the state, announced a shutdown on Monday.

 

Several school districts have been working with state officials to get federal waivers that would let them deliver meals during the school year, much the way they do in the summer.

 

Kelly said the state has begun working with districts to keep those nutrition programs going in some form.

 

She also said that salaried and hourly employees at public schools will continue to be paid. Kansas schools employ more than 72,000 workers.

 

Meanwhile, state universities started making the call this week to move all their classes online.

 

Wichita State University’s campus remains open while Kansas State University closed its dorms. The University of Kansas announced that it plans to finish the semester online, rather than have students return to campus for classes after spring break. It also said students would have to seek special permission to remain in on-campus housing.

 

More than 30 states have already shut down their schools as the United States ramps up its response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The White House warned governors that states with community transmission should shutter schools.

Anonymous ID: 45ce03 March 17, 2020, 6:19 p.m. No.8456352   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8455979

 

Like the attention to detail. The video uses the point with the Marines legs apart.

 

Dan Scavino's pic of the scene posted July 16, 2019 on his facebook the Marines are at attention side by side (rear view of the Castle Clean pic). The White House briefing in the Rose Garden was July 15, 2019.