CPT Tripss
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- Feb 26, 2006
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I was in a similar situation when I was in school. I had a terrible substitute for one semester, though my teacher wasn't pregnant - she had MS. I think the problem lies with the substitute, not the teacher. I think it's unrealistic to think that a teacher should not have children because they might be born at a time that would interfere with her job. Again, I think that there is a really big difference between situations like illness or pregnancy and a vacation.
Most people on this thread aren't saying you should never take kids out of school for vacations. They are just saying that if you choose to do so you also need to accept the consequences of that choice. Many of us are also saying it's unfair and unreasonable to expect a teacher to do even more work because of your personal choice to take a vacation during school.
I've taken my son out of school for trips before. If it would hurt his grades significantly to do so - as it likely will for the rest of his school career - then I wouldn't do it any longer. If my husband and I couldn't get away when my son was out of school and he couldn't get away during the school year, then yes - we would do without vacations for a few years. In fact, we had to cancel a trip we had planned for July because my husband couldn't get away from work. Now my son is in school and so we can't get away because of that. We'll go on a family vacation next time we are able to, whenever that might be. But we won't be taking my son out of school in order to do it.
Not sure what grade is involved, but if it makes you feel any better, through middle school and high school DD missed between 8 and 12 days a year for non-school sponsored athletic competitions. We never tried to claim it was educational, nor did anyone ask us to.
She did school work during the travel to and from the events on the plane, bus or in the airport. A couple of middle school teachers were not cooperative in giving her notice of what they planned to cover, and the principal administered any missed tests quizzes on the first day back. That meant she usually missed another class or two.
By HS, no problems at all - might have been because it was a private school and while the Fathers were generally strict, they understood those kids that had outside activities. No issues with grades, honor roll and honor society all along. As it turned out she went to a university that didn't have he sport and she stopped competing . . . now she is beginning to get back into it again through "masters" events.