Pandemic Pods

While not new, homeschooling is experiencing a resurgence during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. There are several variations:
Micro schools and educational family co-ops. The first usually involves hired professionals to teach a small group of kids (similar to one-room schoolhouses). The second is a parent-organized co-operative where families take turns educating and minding their kids during the week. Pandemic Pods is the fashionable term used to describe one of these arrangements where all group members agree to participate under well-defined and strictly enforced health rules.
COVID-19 has led to school closures around the world. Parents are left to manage their children and it is causing economic, educational, political and psychological distress..
To mitigate the pain of school closures, multiple educational structures have been proposed. These terms are used interchangeably and this makes it confusing for parents who are trying to figure out how to organize their lives this fall as most schools will only offer virtual instruction. But basically there are three distinct ideas: pandemic pods, micro schools, and family co-ops.
Pandemic pod
A pandemic pods is a small group of people who are all taking similar precautions against catching the virus. A family unit living together is a natural pandemic pod — everyone is taking responsibility for everyone else's health outcomes. This is also true of roommates and housemates. If one person in a pandemic pod catches the virus, chances are high that the other members of the pandemic pod will get it too.
Family co-op
A family co-op is not a pandemic-related entity. Most family co-ops form to ease the economic pressures of child care among several families. Several families get together and agree to share afterschool care of all the kids on certain days. This arrangement frees each set of parents from childcare several times per week. If five families are involved, then each family can take responsibility for all kids once per week. Instead of money, this social arrangement trades in time. Family co-ops is a very old arrangement that has been extensively studied in academic literature.
Canadian family bubble
Pandemic pods don't have to be limited to households. In early April of 2020, Canadian authorities actively encouraged the formation of family bubble — two families (usually with kids) who would join together and share responsibility for each other.
Canadian family bubbles are really just a cross between pandemic pods and family co-ops — the responsibility for all of the kids is shared among the adult members with an agreement that all members take the same safety precautions when it comes to preventing catching COVID.
Micro school
A micro school is some variation on the one-room school where parents hire a teacher to educate their children. Micro schools can be as small as just one family hiring a teacher or a group of parents makes arrangements for all of their children together, splitting the costs of such endeavor. The biggest advantage of micro schools is that parents have total control over their children's education, including the choice of teachers. Micro Schools can vary significantly in costs.
If micro schools are crossbred with family co-ops, you get educational family co-ops — small schools that are run by parents, with each family taking on not just after school care but actual instruction. The "cost" of participation is time, effort, and a lot of planning. But the out of pocket costs — e.g. teacher salaries — are very low, since parents take turns doing all of the work.
Pandemic school pods are just a cross between micro schools and pandemic pods. And these come in many variations. Although all have in common the idea of shared COVID concerns.
Pandemic educational family co-op
A pandemic educational family co-op is the cross of all three structures: the micro schools, the family co-ops, and the Pandemic pods. Pandemic educational family co-ops function just like the educational family co-ops but in addition to all of the rest, the pandemic version stresses pandemic precautions within the group. This is the most economical solution for parents that are stuck without "brick and mortar" schools to send their kids during the week.
 
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