Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next time just withdraw your child before the vacation and say you are homeschooling and then reenroll him/her when you return.
Of course this only works if you attend your IB. But it is the cleanest way to do it.
Presumably, even a non-IB school would be able to reenroll your child if you have approval from the teacher and principal, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next time just withdraw your child before the vacation and say you are homeschooling and then reenroll him/her when you return.
Of course this only works if you attend your IB. But it is the cleanest way to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Next time just withdraw your child before the vacation and say you are homeschooling and then reenroll him/her when you return.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks are being a little too hard on OP. These truancy policies matter and there are a lot of kids who need protection. But DCPS does a lousy job of explaining attendance policies, as well as proper reporting procedures (or at least at my inbound). And they shouldn't be wasting resources going after families that value education, especially if there's zero reason to expect the kid is being mistreated.
Strong policies that allow for some judgment is the way to go.
There was a case a few years back involving a single-parent who took her child overseas with her to adopt another child, and the school launched an investigation into her whic, if I recall, almost interfered with the adoption.
All violators of the attendance policy should be treated the same. How is one to prove that someone "values education" or conversely, that someone doesn't?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a first grade teacher I have to say: missing a week and a half of school for a trip is unfair to your child, your child's teacher and the other students in the class. I have never had any of my families do this.
Doesn't it depend on what the child is doing during that week and a half? How about if she's accompanying a mom competing in the Olympic Games to the venue? Or taking a chance to accompany a dad who's going to conferences in two East Asian countries with a tutor in tow for the child? Or competing in international violin concerts in Australia and New Zealand? What's unfair to families is assuming that every week and a half spent in public school is far more enriching than every week and a half missed. Hardly a safe assumption in a city with fast-changing demographics.
I missed two months of second grade in public school to accompany my father on a sabbatical to Europe, where we visited a dozen countries (and countless museums, cathedrals, palaces etc.). As an adult, I'm fairly certain that I wouldn't have earned a PhD in international relations if I hadn't been taken on that particular trip. My 2nd grade teacher strongly encouraged my dad to take me, as did the school's principal. Thank goodness.
Anonymous wrote:There was the girl at Deal a few years ago who was a child prodigy for some musical instrument and she needed to withdraw b/c she missed too many days of school.
Anonymous wrote:As a first grade teacher I have to say: missing a week and a half of school for a trip is unfair to your child, your child's teacher and the other students in the class. I have never had any of my families do this.
Anonymous wrote:Folks are being a little too hard on OP. These truancy policies matter and there are a lot of kids who need protection. But DCPS does a lousy job of explaining attendance policies, as well as proper reporting procedures (or at least at my inbound). And they shouldn't be wasting resources going after families that value education, especially if there's zero reason to expect the kid is being mistreated.
Strong policies that allow for some judgment is the way to go.
There was a case a few years back involving a single-parent who took her child overseas with her to adopt another child, and the school launched an investigation into her whic, if I recall, almost interfered with the adoption.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should have received a robocall for each absence.
Not OP, but the robocalls I get say my child was out, not whether it was marked as excused or unexcused.