ʻAʻohe ala maʻalahi e haʻi iā ʻoe e pili ana i ka nalowale i kā mākou kaiāulu aʻo. [NĀ MEA I MAKE ] [NĀ MEA MAKEMAKE] [LA].
ʻIke wau he mea hoʻonāukiuki kēia. Ua pōʻino wau, akā, ʻaʻole wau e hoʻohālike e ʻike i kāu mea e hana nei. Inā he mau nīnau kāu e pili ana i ka make ʻana o [NAME OF DECEASED], e ʻoluʻolu e hoʻāʻo wau e pane. Hiki iā mākou ke lawe i ka manawa nui e kamaʻilio e pili ana i kēia e like me kou makemake. Ua maikaʻi kou manaʻo. He mea maʻamau ka huhū, ka manaʻoʻiʻo ʻole, a me ke kaumaha, a ua maikaʻi ka uē ʻana. …
–teacher template to report student death to classmates
I kēia kauwela, ke kākau nei nā kumu ʻAmelika i nā laʻana no nā leka e pili ana i ka maʻi hiki ʻole a me ka make i kauoha ʻia e Trump e lawe mai i nā puka kula.
Ke kū nei nā kumu ma ʻAmelika i nā luʻi kūikawā ma waho aʻe o ko lākou mau hoalauna āpau i kēia kauwela. Pono e helu ʻia ʻo COVID-19 me ke kuleana o nā kumu no ka palekana o kā mākou mau keiki.
Despite the fact that the spread of this virus has not been contained and cases are spiking in many areas, reckless politicians and spineless lackeys are forcing the mandate: “School must reopen. "
Arizona teacher Kimberly Lopez Chavez Byrd died after teaching a summer school class. Trump’s response when asked about it: “Schools should be opened. Schools should be opened. Those kids want to go to school. You’re losing a lot of lives by keeping things closed. We saved millions of lives while we did the initial closure. "
We are seeing the poorest management of this disease in the world. When the world has lost 605,000 and the US has lost 143,000, something is utterly incompetent from the top down.
ʻIke wau i nā ʻālana a nā haumāna, nā mākua, a me nā kumu e hōʻoia i ka ʻōlelo hoʻohiki no ka wā e hiki mai ana i kahi hoʻonaʻauao. ʻO ka noi a Trump ʻaʻole ia he mea liʻiliʻi o ka naʻaupō ʻino.
ʻO ka pōʻino no ka mea ʻike mākou i kāna mau kauoha e hoʻonui i ka lōʻihi a me ka hoʻolaha ʻana o kahi maʻi make i loaʻa i nā miliona.
ʻO ka lokoino no ka mea hōʻole ʻo ia i ka mālama ʻana i ka hoʻonui a me ka pono ʻole o ka ʻeha o nā poʻe ʻē aʻe.
Naʻaupō no ka mea hoʻomau ʻo ia i ka hilinaʻi ʻana i kona ʻōpū, he hewa pinepine ia, ma kahi o nā holomua i loaʻa ma o ke ʻano ʻepekema a me ka hoʻoholo ʻana i nā hōʻike.
Ua aʻo au i ka make ʻana o kekahi haumāna aʻu i loko o ko mākou kulanui kaiaulu, a ua hoʻohana wau i nā hola e hoʻoponopono i nā mea e hana ai. ʻAʻohe ala maikaʻi e haʻi aku i ka nūhou maikaʻi ʻole o kahi hoa papa e hoʻi ʻole mai ana i ka papa, a ua paʻakikī wau i ka loiloi ʻana pehea e hoʻopuka ai i ka nūhou weliweli loa. Ua hoʻoholo wau e hiki iaʻu ke kaʻana like i kona make ʻana i ka wā ʻauʻau, ʻaʻole ʻike ka poʻe i kekahi manawa i ka hikiwawe o ka hypothermia, a ʻo ka maʻalili ʻana o ka wai me ka wela. Ua ʻike au i nā kumuwaiwai i loaʻa ma ka pā kula, a ua hoʻouna aku au i nā leka uila e hōʻoia i kaʻu mau hoʻolālā no ka hoʻolako ʻana i nā kumuwaiwai i nā haumāna makemake e hoʻohana.
ʻEhia mau manawa e hana ai nā kumu i kēia i nā mahina e hiki mai ana?
Ua hoʻomanaʻo au i ka noʻonoʻo ʻole i loaʻa iaʻu ma ke ʻano he haumāna a me nā ʻōlelo hoʻohiki aʻu i hana ai e hana ʻoi aku ka maikaʻi ma mua o kekahi mau kumu. Ua helu ʻia au no kahi hōʻikeʻike aʻu i hāʻawi ai i ka lā i make ai koʻu kaikunāne, no ka mea, me he mea lā ua pilikia au; i kēia manawa, ma ke ʻano he kumu, ua hoʻohiki wau e hana maikaʻi wau. Ua heluhelu au i nā pane maʻamau a me nā hōʻailona hōʻailona. Ua nānā au i ka hana pūʻulu a me nā hana i loko o ka papa e ʻike ai i nā haumāna i kūkulu i ka pilina. Ua hoʻohana au i ka hapa nui o ka hopena pule e hōʻoiaʻiʻo ʻaʻole au e hāʻule i kaʻu mau haumāna.
I kēia manawa, ʻoiaʻiʻo, ʻoi aku ka nui o ka maʻi, ʻoi aku ka nui o ka haukapila, a ʻoi aku ka nui o nā make. I ka hele ʻana o nā papa ma kaʻu kula, ʻo Cuyahoga Community College, ma hope o ka puka ʻana mai, wehewehe nā haumāna i nā hōʻailona a me nā makaʻu. ʻO ka ʻoiaʻiʻo, ua hopohopo lākou a pau i ko lākou ʻike. ʻAʻole hiki i ka poʻe i makemake i nā hoʻokolohua. Ua kali kekahi ma ka laina, akā ua hoʻohuli ʻia. He nui nā hana e pono ai lākou e hele, a he kakaikahi ka poʻe i manaʻo e hiki iā lākou ke noʻonoʻo pono e hoʻomākaukau no ka papa.
Mahalo wau ua hoʻoholo ʻia e paʻa kaʻu mau papa i kēia hāʻule ma ka pūnaewele. Hāʻawi ia iaʻu i ka manawa kūpono e hoʻomohala piha i ka papahana a me nā hoʻolālā haʻawina. He ʻokoʻa ka hana ʻana i ka hoʻolikelike ʻana i kaʻu mau papa a me ka hāʻawi ʻana i nā hopena aʻo i loko o ke kikowaena o ke aʻo pūnaewele. Akā, aia ka ʻike nui i nā hana maikaʻi loa no ke aʻo ʻana a me ka hoʻomaopopo ʻana i ke aʻo ʻana o nā haumāna ma ke kahua kahua mamao.
Trump’s forced reopening of schools will cause deaths of students, teachers, and their families. So I should alert everyone to The National Center for School Crisis and Bereavement, as they have guidance and advice for coping and dealing with the unthinkable. Their templates are for addressing students, parents, and staff in the unfortunate event of suicide or death from various causes.
Thanks, Trump, and your minion DeVos, for shattering the world of education for so many, for setting back the US in so many tragic, absolutely avoidable ways. As we get closer to voting for sanity on November 3rd we won’t have to remember far back to recall why it is past time for you to step down and move aside. My duty to my students is to protect the learning environment and ending such derelict non-leadership is part of that duty that I share with teachers everywhere.
Wim Laven, Ph.D., huiia e AlohaKai, aʻo i nā papa ma ka ʻepekema politika a me ka hoʻoholo hakakā.
Hāʻawi kālā ʻia ʻo ZNetwork ma o ka lokomaikaʻi o kāna poʻe heluhelu.
E Makana mai