Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you take a kid out of school two hours early, does that get marked exactly the same way as when they miss a full day?
Not sure if it's still the same, but it used to be if you pick your kid up anytime after lunch, it counts as a full day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you take a kid out of school two hours early, does that get marked exactly the same way as when they miss a full day?
In our school that would be a tardy instead of an absence. Absence = missing the whole day, tardy = missing part of the day.
Yes, I know that doesn’t square with the definition of “tardy” and it confused me the first time I encountered it when we picked our kid up early.
Anonymous wrote:If you take a kid out of school two hours early, does that get marked exactly the same way as when they miss a full day?
Anonymous wrote:Dear Ms. X, I will pick Larlo up at 1 today. He will return to school on Wednesday.
Sincerely,
Larlo's mom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always have written notes giving outrageous reasons if it's not a doctor's appointment.
Please excuse Larlo tomorrow; I will be picking him for an audition to become a leprechaun at 2pm.
Please excuse Larla from arriving late tomorrow morning. POTUS needs to consult with her for advice but she will arrive at 10:30.
The kids LOVE reading their notes on the way to school and it amuses me; we keep stationery in the car for this exact purpose.
Cringe. No one at the school is enamored with your comedy routine.
Seriously.
Actually I find it hilarious! Keep it up, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always have written notes giving outrageous reasons if it's not a doctor's appointment.
Please excuse Larlo tomorrow; I will be picking him for an audition to become a leprechaun at 2pm.
Please excuse Larla from arriving late tomorrow morning. POTUS needs to consult with her for advice but she will arrive at 10:30.
The kids LOVE reading their notes on the way to school and it amuses me; we keep stationery in the car for this exact purpose.
Cringe. No one at the school is enamored with your comedy routine.
Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always have written notes giving outrageous reasons if it's not a doctor's appointment.
Please excuse Larlo tomorrow; I will be picking him for an audition to become a leprechaun at 2pm.
Please excuse Larla from arriving late tomorrow morning. POTUS needs to consult with her for advice but she will arrive at 10:30.
The kids LOVE reading their notes on the way to school and it amuses me; we keep stationery in the car for this exact purpose.
Cringe. No one at the school is enamored with your comedy routine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them an explanation. Just tell them what time you are getting him and leave it at that. I’m a teacher and wouldn’t ask you the reason. None of my business.
This. I never provide a reason unless the teacher needs to know for some reason. I also ask that they email assignments to my kids' email accounts or let them know if there are assignments that need done. Even if you do tell them, there is no guarantee that the school mark your kid excused. I take my kids out of school every year for kids day at work. The kids participate in science experiments, learn about STEM-related fields, get some exercise, and work on team building. That day is always unexcused, even though my kids learn more in that day than they would at school.
Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them an explanation. Just tell them what time you are getting him and leave it at that. I’m a teacher and wouldn’t ask you the reason. None of my business.
Anonymous wrote:I always have written notes giving outrageous reasons if it's not a doctor's appointment.
Please excuse Larlo tomorrow; I will be picking him for an audition to become a leprechaun at 2pm.
Please excuse Larla from arriving late tomorrow morning. POTUS needs to consult with her for advice but she will arrive at 10:30.
The kids LOVE reading their notes on the way to school and it amuses me; we keep stationery in the car for this exact purpose.
Anonymous wrote:No you don't need to give a reason, but your child will probably tell everyone where you are going, so don't say "doctor appointment" in your note if you're really going to get ice cream and play hooky at the zoo.
Anonymous wrote:No you don't need to give a reason, but your child will probably tell everyone where you are going, so don't say "doctor appointment" in your note if you're really going to get ice cream and play hooky at the zoo.