I would have my kids finish their assignment or help them complete it before we left.Date: 5/13/2009 4:27:35 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Not a chance. School is a child''s job, and unless they are sick they need to be present every day. Sometimes, when I hear things like this, I think we''re devolving as a society. We all need time to work and time to play, it''s pretty simple, for kids work is school M-F and homework, play time is the weekend and when after school when homework is done. Kids need structure, love, and discipline far more than they need time to ''rejuvinate.''
An aside, that pertains to why I feel so strongly about this: I teach students that struggle and my students had a large report due to their teachers yesterday; one of my kids actually looked me in the eye and said he didn''t complete the report (that he had been recieving extra help on in school for three weeks) because he went to Disneyland on Monday, instead of school, and didn''t have time to finish it. I am devestated that his parents felt a trip to Disneyland was more important than him finishing the largest classroom assignment of the year.
I hope you flunked him.Date: 5/13/2009 4:27:35 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Not a chance. School is a child''s job, and unless they are sick they need to be present every day. Sometimes, when I hear things like this, I think we''re devolving as a society. We all need time to work and time to play, it''s pretty simple, for kids work is school M-F and homework, play time is the weekend and when after school when homework is done. Kids need structure, love, and discipline far more than they need time to ''rejuvinate.''
An aside, that pertains to why I feel so strongly about this: I teach students that struggle and my students had a large report due to their teachers yesterday; one of my kids actually looked me in the eye and said he didn''t complete the report (that he had been recieving extra help on in school for three weeks) because he went to Disneyland on Monday, instead of school, and didn''t have time to finish it. I am devestated that his parents felt a trip to Disneyland was more important than him finishing the largest classroom assignment of the year.
D&T, Disneyland is 1.5 hours away from us, on a bad day, they should have gone on the weekend, or when school gets out in less than a month. As a teacher I feel very strongly that children need to be in school every day unless they are sick or there is a major family emergency. There is plenty of time off between summer vacation, winter break, the week off in Feb., and spring break, and the many three day weekends given to travel an d spend time as a family.Date: 5/13/2009 4:31:11 PM
Author: D&T
I would have my kids finish their assignment or help them complete it before we left.Date: 5/13/2009 4:27:35 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Not a chance. School is a child''s job, and unless they are sick they need to be present every day. Sometimes, when I hear things like this, I think we''re devolving as a society. We all need time to work and time to play, it''s pretty simple, for kids work is school M-F and homework, play time is the weekend and when after school when homework is done. Kids need structure, love, and discipline far more than they need time to ''rejuvinate.''
An aside, that pertains to why I feel so strongly about this: I teach students that struggle and my students had a large report due to their teachers yesterday; one of my kids actually looked me in the eye and said he didn''t complete the report (that he had been recieving extra help on in school for three weeks) because he went to Disneyland on Monday, instead of school, and didn''t have time to finish it. I am devestated that his parents felt a trip to Disneyland was more important than him finishing the largest classroom assignment of the year.
Unfortunately I am not the one who grades their writing work; my job is to help the writing kids who struggle, but the final product is given to their teacher. I would have started docking 10% off the top of the grade every day until the assignment was complete.Date: 5/13/2009 4:34:04 PM
Author: TravelingGal
I hope you flunked him.Date: 5/13/2009 4:27:35 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Not a chance. School is a child''s job, and unless they are sick they need to be present every day. Sometimes, when I hear things like this, I think we''re devolving as a society. We all need time to work and time to play, it''s pretty simple, for kids work is school M-F and homework, play time is the weekend and when after school when homework is done. Kids need structure, love, and discipline far more than they need time to ''rejuvinate.''
An aside, that pertains to why I feel so strongly about this: I teach students that struggle and my students had a large report due to their teachers yesterday; one of my kids actually looked me in the eye and said he didn''t complete the report (that he had been recieving extra help on in school for three weeks) because he went to Disneyland on Monday, instead of school, and didn''t have time to finish it. I am devestated that his parents felt a trip to Disneyland was more important than him finishing the largest classroom assignment of the year.![]()
Aned you''re right Kimberly...this is why we are devolving as a society and turning out whiny spoiled brats with no grounding in reality.
lol Maybe I''m projecting *my* need to rejuvenate onto him!Date: 5/13/2009 2:24:55 PM
Author: TravelingGal
I''m still laughing over all this. ''Rejuvenate?'' Like that kid is going to tell you at the end of the day ''ah...thanks for that, I feel so refreshed to have this alone time?'' He''s just going to be happy he didn''t have to go to school and learn.
There''s nothing that needs to be "addressed." His teacher is wonderful and he loves her. He''s not being bullied. I was the one who thought the idea up!Date: 5/13/2009 2:52:32 PM
Author: lucyandroger
That''s true. Elementary is different from high school.Date: 5/13/2009 2:42:38 PM
Author: iluvcarats
Date: 5/13/2009 2:39:21 PM
Author: lucyandroger
Well, I''m going to jump in here and say that it depends on the child. My SO and I are both ivy league educated attorneys - so we made it through the school thing just fine and each of us were allowed R&R days (a couple a year - after a big paper was due or to recover from jet lag). I do not think it teaches a child to be lazy. Afterall, don''t most jobs allow a few personal days a year?
That being said, you have to know the reason behind wanting the day off. Honesty is key because you don''t want the child purposely trying to skip a test or if something is wrong at school, you want to know. Our moms much preferred us saying ''hey, can I have the day off today because I''m just mentally exhausted'' rather than **cough, cough** ''I''m sick.''
However, there are definitely children for whom this would be a BAD idea. You have to know your child.
I think there is a big difference between high school and elementary school. I think it is a very bad habit to establish this in elementary school. High school is different.
I have to say that I would still hear my child out and see if they had a valid reason for wanting to stay home. Although my guess is that if they''re asking for R&R from elementary school, there is something wrong (bullying, teacher issues, etc.) that needs to be addressed.
MC, if your son isn''t asking for them, then do yourself a favor and don''t offer! Because apparently he is doing just fine and is having his "fun day" at SCHOOL.Date: 5/13/2009 5:26:03 PM
Author: MC
My son hasn''t asked for R&R days! lol I''m just asking about the concept. Like I said, he''s only missed two days the entire year and both were sometime after Jan.
Camille - I have to say that I pay for my son''s full-day kindergarten. Even though he''s in public school, I paid $3,000 for him to be in full-day instead of part-day! I know that the district has cut funding and all that, however, I did shell out a portion of extra money beyond tax dollars. . Since it''s so close to the end of the year, the ''fun day'' thought crossed my mind. lol
Okay! I was gone for a few hours here and didn''t expect to find so many responses when I got back! lolDate: 5/13/2009 5:28:06 PM
Author: TravelingGal
MC, if your son isn''t asking for them, then do yourself a favor and don''t offer! Because apparently he is doing just fine and is having his ''fun day'' at SCHOOL.![]()
LOL, consider yourself lucky! When my brother and I got in each other nerves, we''d throw things at each other. OK, *I''d* throw things at HIM, but I''ve since gotten my temper under control.Date: 5/13/2009 5:33:46 PM
Author: MC
Fiery - they don''t complain, but they bicker so I can tell they''re getting on each other''s nerves. They each have their own rooms but always follow each other around the house so they don''t get alone time as much as I would think they should get. And, they would NOT play video games. We don''t even own a playstation, Wii, or any of those things. The only games are on the computer and they''re only allowed to play on Fri & Sat night and on holidays. We''re very strict about that!
Kimberly - I agree that a child should NOT go to Disneyland when they should be finishing up the largest assignment of the year, however, most adults who work do take vacations from work now and then. If a child is to look at school as ''a job,'' shouldn''t that grant them the occasional day off? FWIW, quite a few families we know take week long vacations from school and I would NEVER do that. I''m not advocating a child go to Florida and lay out in the sun for a week rather than go to school.
REALLY???? 2 weeks for spring too?Date: 5/13/2009 6:51:12 PM
Author: SanDiegoLady
Our kids here are out the beginning of June, begin school again in August.. have 2 weeks at Christmas, 2 weeks in spring and my step daughter gets a week in the early part of the year about a month after Christmas holiday break with a week off at Thanksgiving.. its insane. I dont ever remember having so much time off for holidays or breaks!!!Date: 5/13/2009 6:42:09 PM
Author: TravelingGal
Seriously, isn''t 2.5 months in the summer and 2 weeks in winter enough to schedule something? I am not surprised this is something that happens in more affluent areas though....
Those occasional days off are already built into their schedule, they would be teacher inservice days, winter break, spring break, the week many students get off in February, and summer. Employees typically get 2-3 weeks paid vacation a year plus some sick time (as a teacher I am far more than lucky for the number of days I have off, and I teach summer school), it is the time built into their schedules to do what they want/need to.Date: 5/13/2009 5:33:46 PM
Author: MC
Kimberly - I agree that a child should NOT go to Disneyland when they should be finishing up the largest assignment of the year, however, most adults who work do take vacations from work now and then. If a child is to look at school as ''a job,'' shouldn''t that grant them the occasional day off? FWIW, quite a few families we know take week long vacations from school and I would NEVER do that. I''m not advocating a child go to Florida and lay out in the sun for a week rather than go to school.
Date: 5/13/2009 5:43:15 PM
Author: fieryred33143
If they''re following each other around, chances are they enjoy each other''s company even if they rather eat worms or whatever it is that boys do before admitting it![]()
Date: 5/13/2009 7:39:04 PM
Author: KimberlyH
TGal, here is a list of no student days in my district this year (school started August 19th and ends June 11th):
Date: 5/13/2009 7:59:22 PM
Author: icekid
Skipping school for kicks in 1st grade just does not make any sense to me. I would not condone it!
Basil,Date: 5/13/2009 7:54:28 PM
Author: basil
Would people feel as strongly if someone pulled their kid out of school for another reason?
- to go to a historic event (inauguration, famous speaker, etc.)
- to experience a work environment (''take your daughter to work'' day, to shadow a professional that the child wanted to be)
- to get one-on-one time with a family member which would otherwise be difficult/impossible during scheduled vacations or weekends
- to go to a place/vacation one otherwise couldn''t go on
I''m not a parent, but I feel like I wouldn''t want to teach my kid that skipping stuff because you feel like it is ok. But I would want to balance that with the best possible life experience for my kid. And I can''t say that I believe that is always in school, every day. My first reaction when I read the OP was ''heck no'' but the more I think about it, the more I think that I could''ve missed a few more days of school and been just fine...
Yep, that''s the way I remember it. It felt like every single month I was putting my son back in day care because school was "out" for something or another and I worked.Date: 5/13/2009 7:39:04 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Those occasional days off are already built into their schedule, they would be teacher inservice days, winter break, spring break, the week many students get off in February, and summer. Employees typically get 2-3 weeks paid vacation a year plus some sick time (as a teacher I am far more than lucky for the number of days I have off, and I teach summer school), it is the time built into their schedules to do what they want/need to.
TGal, here is a list of no student days in my district this year (school started August 19th and ends June 11th):
Sept. 1 (Labor Day)
Sept. 29 (Pro Growth)
Oct. 30 - 31 (Conferences)
Nov. 11 (Veterans Day)
Nov. 24 - 28 (Thanksgiving Break)
Dec. 22 - Jan. 2 (Winter Break)
Jan. 20 - 21 (Semester Break)
Feb. 16 - 20 (President''s Day/District Break)
Mar. 31 (Cesar Chavez Day)
Apr. 6 -10 (Spring Holiday)
May 25 (Memorial Day)
So during the 10 month school year our students have 34 days off and then a 10 week summer break. Schools must be in session 180 days a year according to CA state law.