Truancy is obviously damaging to a child's education, but so is its well-to-do relative: family holidays during term. For the first time in its annual analysis of school attendance, the Ministry of Education counted the number of children taken out of school for a holiday and discovered it accounted for
Editorial: Parents need to commit to school too
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Education requires the parents' commitment too. Photo / 123RF
The good news in the ministry's report is the 23,000 pupils taken out of school during term time last year are only 3.6 per cent of pupils surveyed. The proportion might have been expected to be much higher. Quite a number of parents of school-age children appear to think nothing of taking the kids away from class whenever it suits.
The fact that the survey has found so few do so ought to cause those few to reflect. They are out of step with the great majority of New Zealanders with school-age children who instil in their youngsters a commitment to their education and their school. To discover the meaning of commitment is one of the most valuable experiences imparted by compulsory schooling.
School holidays provide a family with four opportunities a year, totally 12 weeks in all, to go away together. There is no need to be encroaching on the 40 precious weeks that children are in school. Teachers have a great deal to get through in those 40 weeks. Every hour of every day will have been planned to make the maximum use of children's attention span and need of activities.
Parents expect teachers to do their bit. They would resent a need for a reliever because a teacher has gone skiing. Education requires the parents' commitment too.