When I was in school (graduated in '05) the principals sat in the cafeteria every morning for a half hour. If you were leaving that day, for any reason, you brought your note to him. He signed a pink slip (that had a few carbon layers beneath it, too) saying what type of abscence it was, what time you were leaving, etc.
You then took that slip to the teacher at the beginning of the class that you would be leaving from. The teacher signed it, saying they were aware you were leaving and you kept the slip.
If you had a Dr.'s appt, the Dr. signed/stamped the slip verifying that you were there. If it was something else (Family commitment, etc.) your parents signed it confirming.
The next morning you went back to the principal's table and got a blue slip in exchange for your pink slip. The blue slip was a "makeup" slip. The teachers of all the classes you missed had to sign the slip verifying that you picked up your work and spoke with them about what you missed.
At the end of the day, you dropped your blue slip in a box in the office.
Kinda annoying but it worked out pretty well. The slips worked as hall passes, too.
But does this make any sense?
Any kid can just get up and walk out of class? What if they don't really have an appointment, and are just skipping school? And isn't a kid getting up in the middle of class disruptive too??
These pass systems make total sense. I had mental images of kids getting up and leaving whenever the spirit moved them.
Yes it makes sense. Once they are driving they can take themselves to the orthodontist.
Of course the HS my dd went to had a great system.
You would send in a note and the kid brings it to their counselor the day of and they give them a pass to get out of class.
The kid can take themselves if they drive or a parent signs them out at the office.
The kicker is they need to bring back an excuse note from the doctor.
The child is held responsible for checking in and out of class and getting the notes to their counselor.
It taught my dd responsibilty.![]()
When the parents call in to tell them of the appointment, it is written down in a "book". Student then comes to sign out. But how do the teacher, who is letting the student out of class, know (or not know) if the student is really has an appointment?
DS school starts at 8:20.
Policy is that school is to be notified one day in advance of appointments, so I call the office and let them know.
The next morning at 8:40, I call the office and ask for them to page DS to office so that I can pick him up.
This is the part where you lost me. If school starts at 8:20 and you were going to need your son by 8:40, why even have him go to school? Why not just bring him after the appointment? It seems silly to go to school for 20 minutes.
In my school they do page for kids when their parents come to pick them up early, or if the security guard is around they will have him come get the student from class.
Well, DS is 14 and not driving.
And there is no requirement to bring anything back from doctor, dentist, orthodontist, etc. here.
When the kids were in middle school we had to send in a note that morning with the dismissal time. The kids were given a pass to leave class. On the RARE occasion we got the kids out for orthodontic appointments we could put in the note they were able to walk over to the ortho office and back (3 blocks from school). If we were picking them up we had to go into the school and sign them out.
Now that they are in high school we still send the note and the kids get a pass but they sign themselves in and out of the office-we just meet them out front.