Charleneluvsdisney said:On the other hand - I get kind of mad when my son is out of school once or twice a month for "Staff Development Days" - I don't know what they are developing, but I didn't have them growing up, so I don't know why my child has to be out of school constantly - last month there were 2 scheduled within a week of each other! - $$ spent on child care, plus he could be learning on those days! - so why are they angry when I take my child out - as I see it, 10 months of school = 5 days of missed school due to "staff development days!" NYS should check those out!
) travel, I would. In actuality, however, I have taken her out of school for travel to Orlando--twice. Once, when she was in 1st grade and the other when she was in 3rd grade. For both of those trips, my travel to Orlando was work-related. Thankfully, she is a very good student and administration and teachers were supportive--both absences were excused--and there was no problem in arranging ahead time with the teachers for school work for her to do while we were away.
Anyway, my daughter was in 5th grade (this was the 03-04 school year). At back-to-school night, the principal stated absence from school due to family vacation would result in an unexcused absence and teachers were under no obligation to provide make-up work when the student returned or work packets while the student was away. Since my job requires travel to conferences 3-5 times a year, I always alert the teacher in advance--particularly if my daughter will be traveling with me. That year, I had a conference in Italy and made arrangements to take my daughter with me. She was out of school for 10 days--all unexcused. Her teacher was very supportive. This was truly one of those once in a lifetime experiences, and turned out to provide valuable first-hand experience when her class studied the Middle Ages and Renaissance in one of the history tracts. However, she would have accompanied me on this trip whether or not the class had studied the Renaissance.
Okay, I'm getting off the soapbox now......
Lewisc said:...........Most schools have more than enough vacation time and days off to allow for family time and family vacations. I can understand parents who have difficult work schedules or have a Disney business meeting /convention asking to take their children out of school. Taking kids out of school for Disney solely to avoid crowds sends the wrong message about school........Why can't the trip be scheduled around the school schedule? If there is a good reason I'd think most schools will give permission.
cricket429 said:A little harsh DLKT. We are not saying its a matter of measuring the importance of family time versus school time or inconveniencing teachers. Its about teaching them that play time comes after their responsibilities are fulfilled. Even at 5, my daugher is being taught that there are certain things she is expected to do before she can do some of the fun things she wants to do. Its not anything to get hostile about. It is the way we chose to raise our daughter and everyone has different ideas and opinions. And everyone is entitled to them without persecutions.
JMCDAD said:Just thought it bears repeating
This discussion is not about the value of family time and family vacations
I think we all agree that both are tremendously important. (thats why we're on this site to begin with)
But unless you have a job/reason that doesn't allow you to plan vacations when your children are off from school, it is a choice you make for convenience, bottomline.
Me and my wife plan our vacations around school not during it, I feel it does set a bad prescedent. But thats just our opinion.
I don't understand all the posts that go on about how important family vacations are ,how educational they are.
Are they only important and educational if you are missing school at the same time?

ashjohnson80 said:You know, you should really be more concerned with your child's education than taking a Disney vacation. What if they miss something really important and don't ever fully get the grasp of it leaving them dropping out of HS at 16 to work full time at McDonalds. They could have become doctors! They could be saving lives but look at what your yearning for a Disney trip has left them doing! How can you live with yourself??? Huh??? Ok I'm just saying this to have less crowds on my Disney vacations. I couldn't go through with not telling you that. First one to RnRC is a rotten egg....

"puhleeze"? LOL Wow, that was the funniest thing I've seen today.FredS said:I totally agree. If missing a week of school doesn't present a problem for your child, particularly in the higher grades, then I would think about whether or not the school was any good. Kids missing several days just for their parents' convenience does cause extra work for good teachers. As someone else said, multiply this by many kids whose parents decide to vacation during school sessions and it gets to be a significant burden for the teacher, and takes their limited time away from the kids who are there, ready to learn.
And I really, really hate the "family time is more important" comments used as some sort of justification. I think family time is incredibly important but I don't think that one must make a choice between dedication to your family and going on memorable vacations OR having your child abide by school attendance policies. It isn't as if school was in session 11 1/2 months of the year, puhleeze.
There are sometimes exceptions, but to routinely take your child out of school for several days for a vacation, particularly when it violates a reasonable school policy and/or causes the child problems with their lessons, just seems like a huge mistake to me. It seems to send the message that you think you are above the rules and what is easiest for you is more important than your child's education.
"puhleeze"FredS said:...whether or not the school was any good...
(sorry, that still cracks me up) The school is one of the top rated acedemic schools in the area. It even surpasses the private school academic standards. So dont act like our kids are going to be "learned anythin' lesser" than your children because they miss school for a couple of days.
G00fyDad said:"puhleeze"? LOL Wow, that was the funniest thing I've seen today.
So dont act like our kids are going to be "learned anythin' lesser" than your children because they miss school for a couple of days.
Well, we're all just going to have to 'agree to disagree'. But you are missing the point that some of us are trying to make. Its not about missed lessons or "learned anythin' lesser" as you put it. It is about following through with obligations and not shirking responsibility.
Of course we are all entitled to parent our own way. But if you are going to laugh at somebody's opionions, you ought to at least grasp their point.