More than 10 un-excused absences

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Something like this happened to my friend in DCPS when his kids missed the last two weeks of school before summer to travel to Europe. The family mistakenly sent a note to the classroom teacher instead of the office. These absences pushed the kids over the limit of 10.

The family got calls from Children and Family Services, and the school un-enrolled the kids. All a big hassle. But ultimately no harm done. Children and Family Services made the required phone call (no follow up required because the kids were clearly not at risk - they were in the South of France!), and the kids re-enrolled at the same school for the next school year. This would have been a huge problem, however, had the kids not been attending their IB school.



Wow - the school simply un-enrolled them? This does not sound like a desirable school.


I'm the quoted PP. The school was Janney.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP- This happened to me in another school system. I got a note saying my child had too many unexcused absences with a threat to involve the courts. I called the school and they demanded I get medical notes for the days my child saw a doctor. I think we had 11 unexcused days - one full week for confirmed flu and then strep twice. It was a rough year. Plus I pulled them out when their older brother returned from Afghanistan.

Here's the thing - We have five kids and this was our youngest. School threats don't rattle me like they do a lot of parents. I called the school's bluff. I wasn't about to go through the hassle of finding old medical records. My child was a straight A student in the gifted program. I told the school to escalate it if they felt it was important enough, otherwise I didn't want to hear another word about it.

They dropped it. I feel very strongly that schools overstep their boundaries. If I say my kids are sick, they are sick. If I want to pull them out of school for an overseas trip, I will. I'm not asking permission. Once I made it clear that I wasn't at all concerned, the school backed off. I was polite, but firm.


I like your attitude! After years overseas and in private (American) schools, I find the nanny-state aspect of DCPS to be so oppressive. Don't get me wrong, I understand that schools need to play this role in ensuring children are not being neglected or worse, but personally I find it hard to deal with.
Anonymous
This thread is HILARIOUS! References to the Brady Bunch to make a point. Classic!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:20:15, it depends on the school. My former school made us write a note for every absence. The new school prefers you call the front office. Also, enforcement seems to vary per school. Some WOTP elementaries seem to accept the international travel excuse more readily (I suspect you are at the one I'm thinking of), but other elementaries enforce the policy strictly. However, I kind of think that 10 unexcused absences isn't that hard to manage. I could take my kids out for two weeks to go to Spain and not even have a problem. Yes, they'll be absent outside of that, but only with excused illnesses. Not such a big deal. Oh, except for little Larla and her tuba recitals that is.


I'm not at the school you are thinking of, we are on Capitol Hill and not At Brent or Maury.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP- This happened to me in another school system. I got a note saying my child had too many unexcused absences with a threat to involve the courts. I called the school and they demanded I get medical notes for the days my child saw a doctor. I think we had 11 unexcused days - one full week for confirmed flu and then strep twice. It was a rough year. Plus I pulled them out when their older brother returned from Afghanistan.

Here's the thing - We have five kids and this was our youngest. School threats don't rattle me like they do a lot of parents. I called the school's bluff. I wasn't about to go through the hassle of finding old medical records. My child was a straight A student in the gifted program. I told the school to escalate it if they felt it was important enough, otherwise I didn't want to hear another word about it.

They dropped it. I feel very strongly that schools overstep their boundaries. If I say my kids are sick, they are sick. If I want to pull them out of school for an overseas trip, I will. I'm not asking permission. Once I made it clear that I wasn't at all concerned, the school backed off. I was polite, but firm.


I like your attitude! After years overseas and in private (American) schools, I find the nanny-state aspect of DCPS to be so oppressive. Don't get me wrong, I understand that schools need to play this role in ensuring children are not being neglected or worse, but personally I find it hard to deal with.


I think the reason why DCPS does this is because we have many children that missed tons of days, come in the last week of an advisory begging for work to make up and then when they fail due to absences, their parents try to take the school to court. This happens a lot more than DCPS would like to admit.
Anonymous
I don't think that DCPS tracking and enforcing enrollment policies makes them a "nanny state."

There are over 45K children in the system. They have enough to deal with. In the wake of the Relish Rudd tragedy they are obviously putting more efforts into it as they should. They should not have to track each family and decide which ones should except scrutiny. It is up to the family to keep the school informed and make accommodations. Deal with it.

If our daughter is sick I send an email to the teacher and administrator that tracks attendance as soon as I know I'm keeping her home.

"Sally thew up this morning. We'll be keeping her home today." It's not hard.

If we are taking a trip that will pull her out of school I do the same well in advance.

"Sally will not be in school on XX as we are traveling to visit family. Ms X, please let us know if there are any work that can be done in advance or assignments we can take with us."



Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP- This happened to me in another school system. I got a note saying my child had too many unexcused absences with a threat to involve the courts. I called the school and they demanded I get medical notes for the days my child saw a doctor. I think we had 11 unexcused days - one full week for confirmed flu and then strep twice. It was a rough year. Plus I pulled them out when their older brother returned from Afghanistan.

Here's the thing - We have five kids and this was our youngest. School threats don't rattle me like they do a lot of parents. I called the school's bluff. I wasn't about to go through the hassle of finding old medical records. My child was a straight A student in the gifted program. I told the school to escalate it if they felt it was important enough, otherwise I didn't want to hear another word about it.

They dropped it. I feel very strongly that schools overstep their boundaries. If I say my kids are sick, they are sick. If I want to pull them out of school for an overseas trip, I will. I'm not asking permission. Once I made it clear that I wasn't at all concerned, the school backed off. I was polite, but firm.


Informing you of the DCPS Attendance Policy is not a threat, it is just that information. Had you received a letter from the courts, you would have been upset that you weren't informed. You are informed, and you perceive it as a threat. WTF, you can't have it both ways.
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