Ember
<font color=blue>I've also crazy glued myself to m
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2005
- Messages
- 3,464
I teach kindergarten right now, so there's really no point. (Though I have had parents ask. I tell them to read with their child.
) But it got me wondering what I'd do at older grades.
I can't help thinking I wouldn't assign work for a few reasons. One, it a vacation. Regardless of the fact that it's during school time, it's still special time with family. Two, other then maybe journal writing it seems like much of the work would be "busy work." Worksheets that cover what the class is doing isn't nearly the same as the lessons taught in class.
Lastly, I don't really think it's fair to ask a teacher to do a lot of extra work for a student who has a family choosing to remove them from school. Part of that choice is knowing the student is missing lessons and weighing that the vacation is more important. (This is not a judgment of the parents, just a statement of fact.)
Anyway, if you're a teacher what do you do when it comes to a student leaving for a week or two to vacation?

I can't help thinking I wouldn't assign work for a few reasons. One, it a vacation. Regardless of the fact that it's during school time, it's still special time with family. Two, other then maybe journal writing it seems like much of the work would be "busy work." Worksheets that cover what the class is doing isn't nearly the same as the lessons taught in class.
Lastly, I don't really think it's fair to ask a teacher to do a lot of extra work for a student who has a family choosing to remove them from school. Part of that choice is knowing the student is missing lessons and weighing that the vacation is more important. (This is not a judgment of the parents, just a statement of fact.)
Anyway, if you're a teacher what do you do when it comes to a student leaving for a week or two to vacation?