"What country do we live in? Anyone heard of FREEDOM??? Since when do we not have the right to spend some quality time with our families at a time and place of our choice?"
Personally, I don't bother telling the school where we will be when we are out of town, I agree that it is NOTB. However, my child attends a private school.
I *firmly* believe that the primary reason that public schools are adopting really draconian policies these days is money. Cold hard cash. The states all pay public schools X amount per day for each student that is present that day. If children are out, the district loses money. Where I live, getting public school kids to attend the first day of school is traditionally a problem. Last year, 25% of 40,000 students missed the first day of school, and the district lost over $600,000 in state funding for just that ONE day. Right now, the district is many millions of dollars in debt, largely because attendance problems created a huge shortfall in the amount of state funding that the schools were expecting.
So, as an additional strategy, you might offer to make up for any state funding that the school will not receive if your child is out. (I am NOT suggesting doing this as a bribe to get the principal to overlook the absence; I am suggesting it as a way to allow school officials to protect their fiscal interests while still allowing the absence.)
As to truancy boards, calling is not the thing to do. Send an advance letter, via certified mail, with copies of all of your correspondence with the school and teacher regarding the absence. Obviously, the tone of the letter should be polite, but groveling is not necessary. Believe me, a truancy judge is NOT going to want to waste his/her time with a concerned and involved parent who presented a make-up work plan *in advance* for a few days of out-of-town travel. They have MUCH better uses for their time. However, once the wheels of the truancy courts process get moving, they are hard to stop. Sending an advance letter should be much appreciated, as it makes it possible to head all of that paperwork off before it starts. The return letter will probably contain a suggestion to try to schedule on a school vacation next time, but will almost certainly excuse you from truancy charges for the days in question.