Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to report it to the attendance secretary or do their form, if they have one. Not very hard. If you don't, its appropriate they send a message so parents know in case their kids skipped school.
Yes, that’s the point. We -DO- report it to the attendance secretary and we -STILL- get a phone call, text and email. That’s why everyone is annoyed about it.
Anonymous wrote:What happens if a person is chronically absent with excused absences due to multiple periods of illness and still works hard and has straight As or the like? Does the school see this differently?
That is very different than someone with the same number of absences who is not doing the work or doing poorly in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are required steps. Our social worker went over the required steps the district has to take before a kid's case can go to truancy court. These mass emails/call/messages are the first step. Then comes the letters sent to the home address. Then home visits, etc. They have to follow the same steps for everyone.
These are excused absences. Are they required to do this for excused absence???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to report it to the attendance secretary or do their form, if they have one. Not very hard. If you don't, its appropriate they send a message so parents know in case their kids skipped school.
Yes, that’s the point. We -DO- report it to the attendance secretary and we -STILL- get a phone call, text and email. That’s why everyone is annoyed about it.
Again, if your kid is on track to be chronically absent, you’re going to hear about it. It’s just two days per month. They don’t differentiate between excused and unexcused absences. 18 days is 18 days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to report it to the attendance secretary or do their form, if they have one. Not very hard. If you don't, its appropriate they send a message so parents know in case their kids skipped school.
Yes, that’s the point. We -DO- report it to the attendance secretary and we -STILL- get a phone call, text and email. That’s why everyone is annoyed about it.
Anonymous wrote:You need to report it to the attendance secretary or do their form, if they have one. Not very hard. If you don't, its appropriate they send a message so parents know in case their kids skipped school.
Anonymous wrote:You need to report it to the attendance secretary or do their form, if they have one. Not very hard. If you don't, its appropriate they send a message so parents know in case their kids skipped school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This shows why automation in communications is not a good idea. It does more harm than good.
What harm?
People whose hobby is freaking out are going to freak out anyway.
Anonymous wrote:My kid was suspended and we STILL got the text. It was MCPS’s decision not to have her in school (because of her actions, not trying to deflect), but the text made my jaw drop.
Anonymous wrote:I was pissed to get this when my kids missed three days of school to attend a funeral of a very loved family member. Extensive travel was required and both kids schools and all their many teachers knew about this excused absence and were sympathetic. I know it was an automated message but it felt really insensitive and unnecessary when I’d clearly communicated the reason for the absence.
Anonymous wrote:This shows why automation in communications is not a good idea. It does more harm than good.