A key moment in this v good @emilybazelon roundtable about remote learning: Denver schools chief says they'll start offering child care for K-5 students, and @nhannahjones asks: "Why child care providers or paraprofessionals instead of teachers teaching?" nytimes.com/interactive/20…
More: "The science doesn’t change based on whether you have a childcare provider or a teacher in the building. If we’re saying we don’t know enough for teachers to come back in classrooms but we know enough for low-wage child care workers to come back in—I don’t understand that."
Denver schools chief @susancdenver answers, "Yes, it’s a crazy world when we’re saying it’s not safe for teachers but people who make $15-$20/hr can come back. I’ve said to my teachers [and] my school board, 'I don’t want to be the leader of an organization that believes that.'”
And here are some nuggets from children.
And here are some pictures of kids actually in school around the country, which is happening in more places than I think many realize. Needville TX (photo by Eli Durst):
Boynton Beach FL (photo by Erika Larsen)
Wyoming OH (photo by Michael Wilson):
Waukesha WI (photo by Lyndon French)
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"As we emerge from our most restrictive covid precautions, the tables have turned: I find myself in a world in which many have become more introverted. And I hate it." Great column by @rebeccamakkai: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/…
Key graf:
"I reconnected with a large group of friends at an outdoor restaurant...At the end of dinner, [two] announced that although they’d had a wonderful time, they wouldn’t make it to another planned gathering three weeks later; they needed at least a month to recover.
This is a v sharp Janan Ganesh column noting how similar Britain and France have come to be: same size, same hyper-dominant capital region, same post-imperial wistfulness. Some quotes follow. ft.com/content/beff18…
"Each nation has a monstrously dominant capital. Politics, media, finance and culture are concentrated in one city. No European nation of comparable size--not Spain, not Italy, not Germany--does that. Nor does the US, Australia or Canada..."
"...The result is two similarly distorted countries. Lots of democracies have angry hinterlands but in few is the populist rage so focused against one place...."
Hospitals are closing at disprortionately high rates in Mississippi and the other nine red states that have refused to accept Obamacare's Medicaid expansion, even though the fed gov't picks up 90 pct of the cost and has further sweetened the pot recently. nytimes.com/2023/03/28/us/…
"Expanding Medicaid would uncork $1.35 billion a year in federal funds to [Mississippi] hospitals and health care providers...And it would guarantee coverage to 100,000 uninsured adults making less than $20,120 in a state whose death rates are at or near the nation’s highest..."
Of the "close to two million other [uninsured] Americans who live in the states that have not expanded Medicaid, three in five are adults of color, according to a 2021 study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities...In Mississippi, more than half are Black."
Wow. Boeing is arguing that it is not liable for victim suffering claims in Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX crash because "victims died painlessly because the airplane crashed into the ground so fast that their brains didn’t have time to process pain signals." wsj.com/articles/boein…
Kids "are learning to hate the subject [of English] well before college. Both in terms of what kids are assigned and how they are instructed to read it, English class in middle and high school is often a misery." nytimes.com/2023/03/09/opi…
Stunning: "More than one-third of all stores that opened in the United States in 2021 and 2022 were dollar stores. Dollar General alone opened 2,060 locations during those years, far more than any other retailer." nytimes.com/2023/03/01/bus…
But the bipartisan backlash has arrived: "Since 2019, at least 75 communities have voted down proposed dollar stores, while roughly 50 have enacted moratoriums or other broad limits on dollar store development, according to a new report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance."
"92 percent of Dollar General workers earn less than $15 an hour, lower than many other companies surveyed, including Burger King, Walmart and Dunkin’. About 20 percent of Dollar General workers earn less than $10 an hour."