Anonymous wrote:Our family didn’t think much of missing school in early/ mid elementary for travel because we always did educational things like go to museums and whatever. Our school was also not meeting my expectations anyways so I was already supplementing at home with phonics and spelling which seemed to be frivolous to the charter we were at.
Things change in middle school because the students are now tracking multiple assignments from 5-6 different teachers and often some assignments are in class and not just homework so we no longer feel great about missing school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was a big deal in elementary. Maybe your child wasn't affected but other children and the teachers were.
You can go on vacation when school is on break.
You sound like a bitter sad person. How would it affect any other kids?
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/03/29/us/chronic-absences.html
It affects teachers, then the classroom community, and the culture. You all are obviously not alone .. almost everyone is starting to view school as optional. But, it's a vicious cycle because parents skip school, thinking school quality and culture suck anyway, and school quality and culture suffer when school is treated as optional.
I'm neither bitter, nor sad. I don't even think I'm a tool. It's just a real crisis that won't change anytime soon and that DOES seem sad to me.
Anonymous wrote:Our family didn’t think much of missing school in early/ mid elementary for travel because we always did educational things like go to museums and whatever. Our school was also not meeting my expectations anyways so I was already supplementing at home with phonics and spelling which seemed to be frivolous to the charter we were at.
Things change in middle school because the students are now tracking multiple assignments from 5-6 different teachers and often some assignments are in class and not just homework so we no longer feel great about missing school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was a big deal in elementary. Maybe your child wasn't affected but other children and the teachers were.
You can go on vacation when school is on break.
You sound like a bitter sad person. How would it affect any other kids?
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/03/29/us/chronic-absences.html
It affects teachers, then the classroom community, and the culture. You all are obviously not alone .. almost everyone is starting to view school as optional. But, it's a vicious cycle because parents skip school, thinking school quality and culture suck anyway, and school quality and culture suffer when school is treated as optional.
I'm neither bitter, nor sad. I don't even think I'm a tool. It's just a real crisis that won't change anytime soon and that DOES seem sad to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was a big deal in elementary. Maybe your child wasn't affected but other children and the teachers were.
You can go on vacation when school is on break.
You sound like a bitter sad person. How would it affect any other kids?
Anonymous wrote:It was a big deal in elementary. Maybe your child wasn't affected but other children and the teachers were.
You can go on vacation when school is on break.
Anonymous wrote:It was a big deal in elementary. Maybe your child wasn't affected but other children and the teachers were.
You can go on vacation when school is on break.
Anonymous wrote:You'll get a lot of semi-threatening emails/texts but they won't actually do anything to punish you. Email the teachers asking for work the kids can do while they're out. The teachers almost certainly will be understanding if you come to them ahead of time.
As for the PP, you sound like a tool.