I looked up the high school in our neighborhood to sample this data. LOL! Oh no!!! ONE CASE OF COVID IN THE SCHOOL!!! I'm going to rename you Chicken Little.
Which is why households with at-risk people can opt out of returning to school and e-Learn here in Florida. Kids having germs is news.
So when you teacher has to divide their class in three different sections -- and you need another teacher or assistant to teach each section then how is this handled. Recognizing their is only one classroom available to hold all the educators for the class. If you think that going to Walmart or Lowes is the same as teaching in a classroom -- then I think that you need to have a conversation with an educator about your assertions.
A teacher that has to divide their class into three different sections online? Why would they do that? I don't need conversations with "educators" that are pushing a narrative like you, or that are driven by bullshit from the Teacher's Union. Like you. Plenty of educators were working daycare since the crisis began. Where were all the complaints then? Where are they now? Or are young children not contagious in your world? Chicken Little.
Maybe you need to learn how elementary schools operate. Take a look at state requirements to differentiate and teach students at different levels based on capability/understanding. Learn the federal requirements for teaching the special needs children in your class which normally have their own TA. Learn the requirements regarding education of children for Title 1 and the extras that must be provided.
None of this make schools any more contagious than any other public setting, especially when students are virtual. And none of the data supported your statement about "nearly every school has had to close"... Total fabrications. You might want to work for the DNC.
Note my words were "close or partially close" with the definition of partially closed being one or more classrooms being send to virtual classes for a period of days due to COVID outbreak in the class.
Ah, I'm sure if you extend "partially close" to include those schools that closed one or more bathrooms during the period, you'd be close to a "nearly all" number.