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The staffroom

Whether you're a permanent teacher, supply teacher or student teacher, you'll find others in the same situation on our Staffroom forum.

Temporary broom closet in lieu of staff creating a staffroom

999 replies

TheHoneyBadger · 23/10/2020 17:43

Just in case she got lucky and is in the one school that still goes to the pub.

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Augustbreeze · 24/11/2020 18:46

Interesting, just seen a thread pointing out that the winter plan broadens who can form a support bubble (those caring for someone disabled or who have a child under one). Makes me wonder what else is hidden in there but hasn't been announced?

TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 18:48

Just try to breath in different directions and slather everything in hand sanitiser.

Yes he goes to my school. So I even know the lazy shits who haven't sent him work and one is a member of slt.

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TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 18:49

My parents have informed they're allowed a support bubble now despite there being of two of them because they're over 70. That was new to me.

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Augustbreeze · 24/11/2020 18:52

You're a single parent honey so you're allowed one anyway??

TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 18:53

I am allowed one but didn't bubble with parents as they are old and high risk and I'm school filthified.

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TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 18:55

Posted too soon. They're bubbled with my sisters adult children (sister is out of the country and they're living in her house) - one has an immune disorder and just finished uni so is basically self elected shielding, the other is doing a masters but with very little contact time and very safely done and other than that they don't leave the house.

My bubble is my best friend's household and gym buddy. Just remembered gyms are reopening - the glimmer of goodness!

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MrsHamlet · 24/11/2020 18:56

Popping in to Chuck some German supermarket festive treats on the table, and say "do it, Dolly"
Back to exams....

Augustbreeze · 24/11/2020 18:58

So this has been posted on the Bubble Update thread, honey

<a class="break-all" href="http://go.mumsnet.com/?xs=1&id=470X1554755&url=www.gov.uk/guidance/local-restriction-tiers-what-you-need-to-know" target="_blank">https://www.gov.uk/guidance/local-restriction-tiers-what-you-need-to-know

From 'What tiers mean'
This guidance sets out what you can and cannot do in each tier.

There is also separate guidance for support and childcare bubbles, which apply across all tiers.

Support bubbles have been expanded. From 2 December you can form a support bubble with another household if any of the following apply to you:

you are the only adult in your household (any other members of the household having been under 18 on 12 June 2020) or are the only adult who does not have a disability that needs continuous care
you have a child under 1
you live with a child under 5 with a disability that needs continuous care

Only works if one of yr parents needs continuous care and they're not in another bubble, as far as I can see?

A case of the more detail you put in, the more confused people get?

TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 19:09

I have no idea where they got the idea from. They're convinced they're allowed as they're over 70. I won't disillusion them as they seemed happy with it Grin

I don't think they're at risk as my niece has gone super careful to the point of trying to tell my sister she can't come back to her own house when she returns to the uk for Christmas despite the fact they're having a test before they leave saudi and paying for another after spending 48hrs in a hotel near the airport after arriving in UK. My sister is having to talk her down and hopefully remind her whose house it is.

My bubble friend is going in and out of supermarkets setting up various promotion stands and health lottery signage and stuff at the minute to make ends meet and keep busy as her business can't run and her staff are furloughed at the minute. Between school and supermarkets we've got the high risk end of things covered.

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WhyNotMe40 · 24/11/2020 19:24

HoneyBadger sorry to hear your DS is not getting adequate work. Unfortunately I don't think it's unusual, which is really crap as it is playing into the 'everyone must be in school at all costs" lot's hands.
I was chatting to a friend whose son goes to the school I work at. Apparently I was the only teacher setting work while he waited for test results. And there's 2 others in that class with X codes due to household positive.
I was shocked. Genuinely.

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 24/11/2020 19:25

Is the plan for christmas bubbles to make people so confused by the logistics that they all just stay at home?

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 24/11/2020 19:29

RE: setting work it can’t be that hard to link to the appropriate section of oak if they do your subject. Yes it might not quite fit exactly with your scheme of work but it has to be better than setting nothing at all.

RuleWithAWoodenFoot · 24/11/2020 19:33

Setting work for the randoms is taking so much time. Definitely no time to mark it properly. At least 45 minutes after school faffing about with lessons - that's per child. Stupid really.

I'm irritated about our bubble closure thing today. PHE/DfE whatever, said all home until 7th December. We don't know who it is, whether it's an adult or a child even.

Bet school is half empty tomorrow.

TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 19:40

Definitely better than nothing. He's missed three lessons of Science in 2 days. Finally today someone has linked a powerpoint that says, 'work through this' for science. It's a powerpoint full of questions with no content or reference as to where they should look for explanations or answers.

Every other lesson is meant to be live with meaningful bridging lessons in between. One of his science teachers is SLT. It's a joke. They've set one piece after three lessons have been missed and it's not even vaguely appropriate.

Other than that he's had one maths lesson. That's two days education for someone in a closed year group - ie there are two year groups out so it's not like they haven't gained time to do this in and this is absolutely when full remote is meant to kick in and is legally required. Sorry - really ranty tonight. What happens in the broom cupboard stays in the broom cupboard so I'm letting it out in here.

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plasticboxesrock · 24/11/2020 19:47

Sorry to hear about inadequate provision, HoneyBadger.

Mine has had live lessons today - even PE! (much to DC's disgust, having to do press ups with the camera on). It seems to have worked reasonably well. There are so many Outlook emails though, notifications that work has been put on google classroom or epraise, an actual email from the form tutor got missed.

I was responsible for sending a coughing boy home this afternoon. Once he had coughed on me, of course. Apparently the parents were apoplectic as it was "just a bit of a cough". Hmm....

MrsHamlet · 24/11/2020 19:48

A member of staff who is known lazy bastard got caught by the DHT skiving when he should have been teaching a live year 10 lesson. Parents actually called in to complain 🤣.
Sadly he's buddies with the head so although there was a bollocking, it won't make any difference.

WhyNotMe40 · 24/11/2020 20:05

I'm actually putting BBC Bitesize links, oak Academy links, quiz links and uploading worksheets for every single lesson as I plan them, as every class I have had at least one X codes student. If my PowerPoint is self explanatory then I've put it on as a PDF as well, so they have a choice of resources. I'm finding if I do it as a job lot as I plan, it doesn't take too long.

noblegiraffe · 24/11/2020 20:08

Please join me in emailing your MPs (again). From another thread a suggested email to amend and improve (and to correct the grammar of, English teachers) to save time.

Dear X

I am writing to you because I am increasingly alarmed about the worsening situation in secondary schools in England.

Last week's ONS random sampling data showed that the infection rate in secondary school children continues to increase at a worrying rate, after a short dip at half term which confirms that the transmission in this group of children is related to school attendance. They are the most infected subset of the population, with an estimated 1 in 50 students affected.
The latest attendance figures show that nearly 900,000 pupils were absent from school for covid reasons last Thursday. 73% of secondary schools had isolating pupils due to contact with cases within the school. Again, this represents a rapidly worsening picture, with only 64% of secondary schools affected the Thursday before. 1% of schools are completely closed, this was 0.4% the previous week.

It appears that any efforts to control the transmission of covid within secondary schools is not working. The change from sending home full bubbles when there area positive cases to only sending home close contacts is not breaking the chain of transmission and causing further cases, and more pupils to be sent home. Some children have spent many weeks in quarantine since September, unable to access face-to-face teaching and not even allowed to leave the house. This should be a national scandal, and it is inexplicable that it is not headline news as it was when it was university students that were affected.

The DfE response to these worrying figures, rather than recognising the need to improve measures to control the spread, is to suggest that the issue is that schools are sending home too many pupils. Given the increasing infection rates, sending home fewer pupils than currently would seem to be an extremely counter-productive and would contribute to increased spread.

There is nothing to suggest that the situation will improve, and everything to suggest that it will worsen over the next 3 weeks. More schools will have to close due to lack of staffing, and more pupils will be trapped at home quarantining, some for the Christmas period.

That secondary school pupils are becoming increasingly infected with covid should be a national concern given the latest news that Christmas will bring more household mingling. These children will be visiting elderly relatives, indoors, for extended periods, and there will be tragic consequences. The government will be held responsible for this, particularly given that they have overturned some schools' decisions to close early to provide a safety buffer for families before Christmas.

Please could you raise with your colleague Gavin Williamson, and the DfE as a matter of urgency the issue of inadequate mitigation measures in secondary schools which is leading to uncontrolled transmission of covid, and nearly a million students out of school?

The use of masks in classrooms is currently 'to be avoided' in the school guidance, due to potential effects on teaching and learning. This should now be balanced against the huge disruption to teaching and learning due to pupils and teachers being unable to attend school.

Mass testing in schools should be a priority. We know that children are more likely to be asymptomatic or have symptoms which do not currently trigger a test. As a result they are in school spreading covid, which will then affect teachers and be taken back to the community. Instead of isolating only close contacts the entire bubble should be tested when there is a positive case to identify all infected pupils.

Funding should be given to schools to improve ventilation in classrooms, as has been done in other countries.

The position of clinically extremely vulnerable teachers and children, and those who have vulnerable members of their household should be reconsidered. Forcing them to work or study in an environment which is obviously not safe after lockdown is completely unacceptable, and I note that you and your colleagues are not expected to put yourselves and your families at risk in this way.

Please note that I understand that keeping schools open is a priority for the government, but they are currently failing in this. Saying that schools will be kept open is not enough, swift action needs to be taken before the system collapses as is happening in Hull.

I look forward to your response,
Kind regards...

Use this website to email your MP www.writetothem.com/
If you email directly, you need to make sure you include your address to prove you're a constituent.

MrsHamlet · 24/11/2020 20:10

Thanks noble. My MP is labour and v good. School's is a true blue useless Tory :(

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 24/11/2020 20:12

Mine seems to be campaigning for us to be in tier 1 and get everything open again. Might send it to him just to see what his pointless response is.

plasticboxesrock · 24/11/2020 20:30

Thanks Noble. Sent to my useless Tory MP.

WhyNotMe40 · 24/11/2020 20:30

I have emailed my Tory MP 3 X during this pandemic, having never ever contacted an MP before (apart from to get them to come into school to do a careers talk!).
From the responses, I don't think he actually reads his emails. Every reply has only been vaguely related to what I said....
I'll try again though. Thanks for the template.

Sureitwillbegrand · 24/11/2020 20:35

Thanks @noblegiraffe, sent to mine will be interested in the reply.

monkeytennis97 · 24/11/2020 20:38

Sent it to our (useless ladder climbing) Tory MP, thanks @noblegiraffe

TheHoneyBadger · 24/11/2020 20:44

That crap from Wankcock about how we are peculiar as Brits for going to work when sick is still going round in my head. What an utterly bizarre speech. I take it he knows you don't get statutory sick pay immediately and it's pennies when you do and that a large percentage of workers are on zero hours contracts or forced by what are clearly employers to call themselves self employed and take responsibility for their own taxes etc? Does he even live in this country?

He must have seen during the first lockdown all the revelations that sick cleaners were going to work in hospitals because their jobs were outsourced to subcontractors who didn't pay sick pay? He must have seen the discussions around people who are told to self isolate but can't afford to are going to work?

That feels like new level gas lighting or he really is high on something or stupendously thick.

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