bonnaroomama
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- May 3, 2010
- Messages
- 84
Frankly I dont know why this is debated over and over again. It is no ones business when I take my child out of school. I am a loving, caring, hard-working mother who provides clean clothes, hot meals, homework help, moral guidance and who works very hard for all of it. I will not apologize to anyone (teachers included) if the only way we can provide a family vacation is to have the kids miss 2 or 3 days of school. The work is always made up and the kids don't seem to suffer for having done it once every couple of years.
And as for parents being to blame for the state of the education of children.....I think some teachers had better take a look in the mirror. All I hear from a good portion of them (at least locally) is "gimme more money, more time off, more benefits, etc." They seem so involved in what they are not getting for themselves that I'm not sure how any teaching is being done.
We are going next Thanksgiving and I'm not apologizing to anyone or feeling guilty about it.
Hold the phone! I was agreeing with everything you said about it being the parents' prerogative, right up until the part about teachers demanding too much. I am a college professor, used to work as a pre-K teacher; the state doesn't pay most of my benefits (500 a month max so 1/3 of my check goes to benefits) and I make only 30k a year. I'm hardly living the high life for the 50 hours plus a week I put in, and I make more than most teachers here in Tulsa. I made more as a waitress; I teach because I love it and I believe in education.
I also provide a lot of materials out of my own pocket, although not remotely enough to what I would if I taught elementary or high school.
Teachers are a product of a system that makes us work to have students pass tests. They are so busy teaching students to pass tests that they don't have time to actually teach students to learn, analyze and integrate information.
But that's off topic, and not what this thread is for! Let's stay away from the red herrings.
Back to kids @ Disney, my mom and dad used to get a copy of the lesson plan. It was up to them to teach me and believe me, we worked our bums off reading. I am excellent at reading in the car as I tried to get all my homework done in the 24-hour ride to Disney so I wouldn't have to do any on vacation. It's something that you know if your kids and your family can handle.
I agree with PP who said there are families who just don't care and are just going because the parents want to. But I see our trip as awesome quality family time, and even if my two-year-old, who went twice as an infant, isn't "getting anything" out of Disney, we are all getting the bonding experience. I work a TON and so does his dad, who is a full-time college student. 9 days with nothing but attention on each other? Huzzah!
One of the traditions we started 14 years ago when we got together was taking vacations regularly (it's Shakespearean...anytime Shakespeare's people need to work something out, they go to the woods or wilderness, solve the problem, then come on back to town). So once a year, sometimes twice, to the peril of bills and responsibilities, we do make some kind of pilgrimage to find the heart of our family, whether to the mountains, to the Netherlands or Germany, to the woods, or to Disney. Going on vacation is in essence forgoing responsibility. You try your best to keep up from far away, but you know there's something that doesn't get the attention it should. And for what? To reclaim your souls, to be a family again, or if not to be a family again, to be yourself again.




It is everywhere these days (not just here - EVERYWHERE). We all come from many walks of life, with many different histories and NO ONE on here has the right to be the end all be all of Disney vacation planning. This board is here to HELP not hinder. So, let's all HELP and figure out this dang crowd situation..........because I want to know when the slow time is......
