Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI - pulling your kids to homeschool for a period of time and then re-enrolling them is perfectly legal. You don’t need their permission, just a letter of intent to homeschool. And they can’t stop you from re-enrolling when you want to.
You need more than a letter of intent. You need your transcript, list of subjects you plan to teach, and the letter of intent, and then of course you have to send it in. And to re-enroll obviously you need all those documents, proof of residency, etc. I'd rather go to court and explain that I wanted my kid to see their grandma. Not that that will happen, obviously.
Anonymous wrote:I think those letters are automatically sent when you trigger a certain number of absences. We have gotten them before.
Anonymous wrote:FYI - pulling your kids to homeschool for a period of time and then re-enrolling them is perfectly legal. You don’t need their permission, just a letter of intent to homeschool. And they can’t stop you from re-enrolling when you want to.
Anonymous wrote:It's cute when APS pretends to care about whether kids are in school or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. That sounds like a little much.
I did not receive a letter like that but I did have to have a visit with a social worker after DD missed more than maybe 18 days of school. This was because of major stomach aches and a family trip. It was actually a great conversation; I learned that DD's stomach aches were likely a result of anxiety and got her into therapy. I genuinely felt like it was to help our situation rather than to "get after us."
In your situation that form letter is just to get parents who are blase about attendance to act. Statistically speaking, it is really bad to miss a ton of school, so schools highly discourage it. Also, if too many kids in a school miss more than 18 days of school, the school gets a bad grade on their school report card and might sink to level 2 status. That means the school gets a lot more scrutiny from the county (and probably the state, I am not too familiar with how it works). Teachers hate that because it means much less autonomy, so I don't blame the schools for wanting to avoid that situation.
TLDR I am 99.99% sure they would not haul you to court for this because you aren't the target audience of that letter. Even if they did, I personally wouldn't let that stop me from going on this trip. Connecting with grandparents and family of origin is important and the educational consequences will be minimal.
I agree with above. However, I believe it's a problem as the student gets older. Hopefully this isn't a yearly occurrence for your child. I don't get why families can't/won't make their long trips during the times that would minimize their student's absences. Nevertheless, I do believe it's a case-by-case basis. Your child is ahead and won't likely suffer academically. Please keep in mind, though, that going into middle and high school, kids do more group projects and classes are more significantly impacted by absences.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. That sounds like a little much.
I did not receive a letter like that but I did have to have a visit with a social worker after DD missed more than maybe 18 days of school. This was because of major stomach aches and a family trip. It was actually a great conversation; I learned that DD's stomach aches were likely a result of anxiety and got her into therapy. I genuinely felt like it was to help our situation rather than to "get after us."
In your situation that form letter is just to get parents who are blase about attendance to act. Statistically speaking, it is really bad to miss a ton of school, so schools highly discourage it. Also, if too many kids in a school miss more than 18 days of school, the school gets a bad grade on their school report card and might sink to level 2 status. That means the school gets a lot more scrutiny from the county (and probably the state, I am not too familiar with how it works). Teachers hate that because it means much less autonomy, so I don't blame the schools for wanting to avoid that situation.
TLDR I am 99.99% sure they would not haul you to court for this because you aren't the target audience of that letter. Even if they did, I personally wouldn't let that stop me from going on this trip. Connecting with grandparents and family of origin is important and the educational consequences will be minimal.