Glad I'm not your mommy too. |
Okay. You've clearly bought into the elitist entitled BS here. I don't have to be "friendly" about that. |
| I disagree that by occassionally keeping a child home for a glorious day of sledding, an extra day of an educational vacation, or even the first glorious day of spring that you're teaching them "that activities are more important than meeting commitments." I think you're teaching them to seize the day, enjoy the God-given gifts of nature's beauty, and that family and making time for renewal sometimes outweighs school. A friend of my husband's just died (too young) this morning. I wonder which choice she would regret more? |
Please stop! I took my child out of school for over a week in elementary school to go on a once-in-a-lifetime trip far, far away. In middle school we had a Mommy and Me Day. She's in high school now and would NEVER think of missing school unless it was absolutely necessary. She's a college-bound junior who never lost sight of the fact that education is very important. She doesn't skip (school has an automated system that would call my cell phone to let me know of an absence AND attendance is on every report card) for the hell of it. Some of you are really REACHING with these notions that a rare day at home with Mom or Dad (which is different from a day off to just lounge around doing nothing) =issues with absenteeism in adulthood. PS: We took a Mommy and Me day or two in high school as well.
However, to each his own. I think kids will turn out fine whether they're able to take a rare (the key word here) pseudo-snow day or not. |
| If you let your kids miss a day every now and then it teaches them that, yes they can have fun but there is a price to pay for it. They will have work to make up. My DD has been allowed to miss 1 or 2 days a year and like PPs dd she would never think of skipping school. She works hard just like I do, and she deserves a little break now and then. As long as she makes up her work and her grades don't suffer. |
| Is is not that serious people. Teachers took a snow day too. |