I realize your post is just a vent and I sympathize with you. I couldn't stand working around a bunch of sick kids. I hated it when co-workers came to work visibly sick and there's been plenty of times one of my kids has come home from school to tell me a fellow student was sick and then a few days later my kids are sick. It's frustrating to say the least.
But I also think that while it's easy to make the assumption parents are knowingly sending their kids to school sick, it's not always correct. A stomach ache in the morning could be anything from breakfast not kicking in yet, to nerves, to a virus. You just don't always know. And a kid who goes to the nurse at 10:00 with a fever might have been fine at 8:30 before Mom put him/her on the bus.
I also think NCLB and attendance rules have a part in encouraging the practice of sending sick kids to school. On the one hand, parents are told to keep sick kids home but God forbid a child goes over their allotted days missed and then we're bad parents who don't care about education. In addition, there are many districts that throw in personal incentives for perfect attendance and worse, classroom attendance contests, which can subject a child with poor attendance to ridicule from fellow students.
Most parents (and there are exceptions to every rule), even working parents, will keep sick kids home but every once in awhile we can make a bad judgment call and I guarantee you we feel pretty lousy about it when it does happen. We're doing the best we can.
Parents need to be as vigilant as possible and districts have a part too in not sending the mixed message regarding attendance that they often do. JMHO.
But I also think that while it's easy to make the assumption parents are knowingly sending their kids to school sick, it's not always correct. A stomach ache in the morning could be anything from breakfast not kicking in yet, to nerves, to a virus. You just don't always know. And a kid who goes to the nurse at 10:00 with a fever might have been fine at 8:30 before Mom put him/her on the bus.
I also think NCLB and attendance rules have a part in encouraging the practice of sending sick kids to school. On the one hand, parents are told to keep sick kids home but God forbid a child goes over their allotted days missed and then we're bad parents who don't care about education. In addition, there are many districts that throw in personal incentives for perfect attendance and worse, classroom attendance contests, which can subject a child with poor attendance to ridicule from fellow students.
Most parents (and there are exceptions to every rule), even working parents, will keep sick kids home but every once in awhile we can make a bad judgment call and I guarantee you we feel pretty lousy about it when it does happen. We're doing the best we can.
Parents need to be as vigilant as possible and districts have a part too in not sending the mixed message regarding attendance that they often do. JMHO.