mickeyboat
<font color=660099>Nothing like the cream and choc
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 21,318
There may be posters who don't think a teacher should have one day off. I am not one of those people. But to answer the OP's question, I don't think teachers should plan vacations during the school year, but I would defer to the administration's policies on what is allowed.
And just so it is clear, I do not take my kids out for vacations during the school year. I don't agree with it because as far as I am concerned, I have plenty of other times when vacations can be taken - even if it means DH not getting paid for a week, because summer is his busy time.
I don't buy the argument about families not being able to vacation together because the spouse's job does not allow vacations when the teachers have vacatation time (summers and breaks). Why is it o.k. for the spouse's employer to set these limitations, but not the teacher's employer to do so? There are very good reasons why accountants cannot take time off during tax season and why attorneys cannot take off during a trial. The same reasoning holds true for teachers during the school year. (My opinion would be different if there were no scheduled breaks for long stretches of time during the school year, because everyone needs a break, but in our district, that is not the case).
I do think long term subsititutions (more than a couple of days) have a detrimental effect on a child's educational experience. My daughters' teachers have had an incredibly positive impact on their learning experience. I think it has everything to do with their personalities and teaching styles being so well-matched to my kids' styles, the strong loving, trusting and supportive relationships they have formed with my girls, and the routine and normalcy that they crave in the classroom. The worksheets and lesson plans are not what make them good teachers.
Denae
And just so it is clear, I do not take my kids out for vacations during the school year. I don't agree with it because as far as I am concerned, I have plenty of other times when vacations can be taken - even if it means DH not getting paid for a week, because summer is his busy time.
I don't buy the argument about families not being able to vacation together because the spouse's job does not allow vacations when the teachers have vacatation time (summers and breaks). Why is it o.k. for the spouse's employer to set these limitations, but not the teacher's employer to do so? There are very good reasons why accountants cannot take time off during tax season and why attorneys cannot take off during a trial. The same reasoning holds true for teachers during the school year. (My opinion would be different if there were no scheduled breaks for long stretches of time during the school year, because everyone needs a break, but in our district, that is not the case).
I do think long term subsititutions (more than a couple of days) have a detrimental effect on a child's educational experience. My daughters' teachers have had an incredibly positive impact on their learning experience. I think it has everything to do with their personalities and teaching styles being so well-matched to my kids' styles, the strong loving, trusting and supportive relationships they have formed with my girls, and the routine and normalcy that they crave in the classroom. The worksheets and lesson plans are not what make them good teachers.
Denae