Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,187
Well i dont prepare work 2 weeks in advance because I'm not sure how far my class will get, so I can't necessarily give your child the work. Plus, what good will it do to give you worksheets on things they haven't learned yet?!
I'm all for students taking vacations during the school year if that's what your family wants to do. However, I think it's still an UNexcused absense and therefore work missed should not be able to be made up. And the student/parents will be responsible for learning the material, not the teacher who already has 26-30 other students to continue teaching.
Does your classroom really keep up such a pace that missing a week means getting into material not covered yet? I know some high school classes move that fast, but at the elementary level? When we took the kids to Disney in January, DS had the same Saxon math, daily cursive practice, daily spelling assignments, and readling log/comp that he has in school on a day to day basis. We've handled all of that work at home on many occasions, whether because of illness or vacation or simply because his reading support (dyslexia) pull out caused him to miss something. The teacher didn't have to help him learn any of it. I'm perfectly capable of working through times tables and cursive and using spelling words in sentences. The only after-school aspect of getting caught up was staying 10 minutes late to take the weekly spelling test, and since being available to students and parents for 35 minutes after the last bell is part of the work day for teachers in our district, I don't think that was too great a burden on her.
At risk of another tangent... 26-30 kids at the elementary level?!? The biggest class either of my kids have been in thus has has been 20!



