There's always the option of doing homework at the parks at your hotel room. Having a nap time for the grandparents be homework time for the grand kids. I just don't think that's ideal.
Growing up, I never missed a day of school. Literally. I received the perfect attendance award for not missing a day from Kindergarten through senior year. It wasn't that I went to school sick. I just never got sick. Except during Thanksgiving break, anyway. It seems I always seemed to get something that week. But I digress. So I never missed school. My parents never took me out for vacations. I figured I would raise my daughter the same way. Now I'm really changing my mind. Teaching for a while helped me with that. Personally, as long as your students are strong enough academically that a week without formal instruction won't hurt them, and they are responsible enough to make up the work, I see no harm in taking them out of school for a fun family vacation. My advice is to have them do the makeup work prior to ever going on the trip, though. Have your student notify the teachers that he/she will be taking a week at Walt Disney World and the dates and have him/her ask for the assignments (I'd probably follow up as a parent, as well). The teachers should have this available or be able to get it within a day or two. Then, your child can work on it throughout the week leading up to the vacation and then just enjoy Disney without the added stress of working when he gets back to the hotel or knowing he has a mountain of makeup work waiting for him. Then again, if your child has an awesome teacher like some of my former colleagues, he or she might just get to do a short write-up on how he or she used math, English, Science, etc. on the trip, or something relating to a specific subject that your child learned. The kids seemed to enjoy those assignments the most because they got to come back to school and talk Disney.![]()
I think it depends on the kid and the caseload they are carrying. My DD will be a senior this year and in AP classes. There is no way she would miss a week of school. It would be too hard to catch back up. I think I would ask each kid in private for their opinion.
There's always the option of doing homework at the parks at your hotel room. Having a nap time for the grandparents be homework time for the grand kids. I just don't think that's ideal.
I have taken my daughter out of school for a week long Disney vacation almost every year since she was 6. I will be taking her out of school again this Fall for a Disney Cruise/ Disney World vacation. She'll be in the 8th grade this year. Family time is extremely important to me. She has always been able to make up the missed work. It would be impossible for me to get time off from work during Christmas or Easter vacation because I don't have enough seniority, and I am not willing to go during the hot summer. The times when she would be off of school would also be PACKED at Disney, so sometimes you have to pull your kids out of school. They're your children, so nobody should be able to tell you what you can or can't do as far as pulling them out of school.![]()
Who has gone during Spring break? This is our other option, and then tacking on 3 or so days. That way they wouldn't miss that much, be more likely to get the time approved and not get that behind. Three days is much more manageable than 10. It would be more crowded than in February, though.
I know that this is mostly a question for their schools, but we are now thinking of going to WDW in February. Lighter crowds and less money. But it would mean taking the kids out of school on an extended absence. It would also mean they'd need to (probably) bring homework. (I went when I was in 9th grade [and my sister in 7th] and I had a week's worth of math to do before we went which I did in a day.)
Who else has taken their kids out of school? By the way, I should mention that my kids will be in grades 8, 10 and 12.
AP classes are a whole different ballgame. I took all AP classes in high school, and they are very difficult. Sometimes they introduce new material everyday, and it moves at an incredibly fast pace. So the student would be effectively having to self teach very difficult material at WDW.
I personally think taking elementary and even middle school kids out is no big deal. But high school may be a whole different ball game. I also would not want to do homework at WDW. I think it would take away from the magic. But that's just me.
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