Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the parents know and allow it. It’s not rebellion. Not even mild rebellion.
The risk of consequences isn’t from the parents. It’s having an unexcused absence and you skipped on the day of a quiz. Will the teacher let you make it up? How much does it hurt your grade if they don’t?
Anonymous wrote:All the parents know and allow it. It’s not rebellion. Not even mild rebellion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're writing any kind of excuse for your kid, then I think you have gravely misunderstood the purpose and tradition behind Senior Skip Day.
+1
It’s supposed to be a mild rebellion. And should include the risk of consequences. As an adult, your senior is making an independent choice. They shouldn’t need you to be a buffer between them and the school.
Anonymous wrote:The whole point is the risk of getting in trouble, not to have mommy or daddy cover for you.
Anonymous wrote:If you're writing any kind of excuse for your kid, then I think you have gravely misunderstood the purpose and tradition behind Senior Skip Day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the senior's parent writes an excuse for the senior, saying the senior is "sick," then in my opinion as the parent of a senior, it's not Senior Skip Day, it's Helicopter Parenting Your Child Who Is About To Graduate From High School Day.
Wrong forum. No one asked your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the senior's parent writes an excuse for the senior, saying the senior is "sick," then in my opinion as the parent of a senior, it's not Senior Skip Day, it's Helicopter Parenting Your Child Who Is About To Graduate From High School Day.
Wrong forum. No one asked your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:If the senior's parent writes an excuse for the senior, saying the senior is "sick," then in my opinion as the parent of a senior, it's not Senior Skip Day, it's Helicopter Parenting Your Child Who Is About To Graduate From High School Day.