mill4023
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 3,844
We've done it before, but not recently.
The public schools in NC are extremely militant about attendance. Even for excused absences for illness or doctor's visits, we've gotten letters every year for at least 2 of our 4 school age children threatening to hold them back a year because they missed too many days (like 6).
Yeah, that makes sense. Threaten to make my 14 year old repeat a grade due to attendance. That would be great idea for a girl who gets straight A's, scores on the 97th percentile on standardized tests, and took the SAT in 7th grade, scoring better than the average for 11th graders.
It's ridiculous that they don't take anything else into consideration, but it's all about the money they lose when a student isn't in the seat.
If they ever actually followed through and tried to hold her back, we'd be homeschooling the next day.
The main reason I won't do it now is that my 16 yr old son(who is just as smart, but way less motivated than our girls) already does just barely enough to pass his classes. My focus right now is making sure he graduates HS, so I don't want to do anything that would make it more difficult.
But if your kids are doing well in school and can make up the work, especially in the pre-high school years, I wouldn't hesitate.
The public schools in NC are extremely militant about attendance. Even for excused absences for illness or doctor's visits, we've gotten letters every year for at least 2 of our 4 school age children threatening to hold them back a year because they missed too many days (like 6).
Yeah, that makes sense. Threaten to make my 14 year old repeat a grade due to attendance. That would be great idea for a girl who gets straight A's, scores on the 97th percentile on standardized tests, and took the SAT in 7th grade, scoring better than the average for 11th graders.
It's ridiculous that they don't take anything else into consideration, but it's all about the money they lose when a student isn't in the seat.
If they ever actually followed through and tried to hold her back, we'd be homeschooling the next day.
The main reason I won't do it now is that my 16 yr old son(who is just as smart, but way less motivated than our girls) already does just barely enough to pass his classes. My focus right now is making sure he graduates HS, so I don't want to do anything that would make it more difficult.
But if your kids are doing well in school and can make up the work, especially in the pre-high school years, I wouldn't hesitate.