Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the reality is that the only "excused" absence is for the child's illness. My pre-k had issues where the parent/caregiver was too ill to get the kids to school, and that ALSO was not an excused absence because the student themselves was not ill.
sorry. part of having kids is being beholden to their school schedule, even when it's difficult for the parents. Like all of these professional development days that I have to take off of work...
Illness is definitely not the only type of absence that can be excused: https://dcps.dc.gov/publication/attendance-and-truancy-policy
If a student or parent anticipates an absence not covered by the excused absences listed above or
expects to accrue ongoing absences related to a specific condition or circumstance, they may submit a
request for an excused absence due to a special circumstance to the school principal. The principal shall
consult with his or her instructional superintendent before determining whether to grant the excused
absence request. Any absence that does not meet the criteria of an excused absence or fails to satisfy
the documentation requirement of an excused absence within the allowable timeframe will be classified
as an unexcused absence.
Anonymous wrote:the reality is that the only "excused" absence is for the child's illness. My pre-k had issues where the parent/caregiver was too ill to get the kids to school, and that ALSO was not an excused absence because the student themselves was not ill.
sorry. part of having kids is being beholden to their school schedule, even when it's difficult for the parents. Like all of these professional development days that I have to take off of work...
Anonymous wrote:As our counties become more international and also wealthier, school districts are not taking into hand what parents are asking for- longer breaks between quarters so that they can vacation and a shorter summer.
The places we need to travel to in order to visit family are awful in the summer, spring and fall is when we'd like to go so that we can coordinate with other family members. There are basically NO holidays in spring and fall, other than a week for Easter, but it's tied to Easter so plane flights are $$$.
I'd like 2 weeks between each quarter. There's already 2 weeks for Christmas which is great. Summer is way, way too long and it gets hotter every year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools can (and are supposed to) refer you to cps after 10 unexcused absences. They rarely do, though, and even more rarely does cps do anything when it's only 10 non-consecutive days.
But I don't know why your child's absences are any more justified than other people's, just because you're not poor.
This is the key point.
Your child is missing school for reasons that are not excused. This means you get the same communications and deal with the same consequences as every other family whose child misses that much school.
You aren’t special; you’re making a choice to pull your child out for reasons that DCPS doesn’t consider valid. If you don’t want to deal with it, don’t take your kid out of school so much. It’s pretty simple.
Sure. I guess I am just wondering what the actual, real consequences are, realistically, for 10 days of non-consecutive unexcused absences. Like could I lose my OOB spot?
Also, what are some good excuses to use to get some days excused after the fact of missing a few days. I know that’s a morally ambiguous inquiry, but I’m okay with that. A doctor’s note excusing a few days would be great, but I wonder if I could even use the religious observance excuse, which seems like it would be a pretty broadly accepted excuse, especially since we’re in the US with so much religiosity. Pretty hard, legally, to argue with “firmly held beliefs”.