While children and their families are not encouraged to take annual leave during school term time, this can be unavoidable. We are not able to dictate the parents when they take the children from school for holidays because the circumstances are beyond our control.
Parents will sometimes come and approach schools and teachers for work to be done while children are on holidays either interstate or overseas. It really works! The work state is that best sporadically completed. Young people also feel it to be an imposition and don’t approach tasks with a positive mindset.
I was often confronted by families taking leave during school time. Home work as described above was never said. Rather, I’d sit down with children, talk with them about trip diaries and encourage them to compile a journal that covered the holiday period.
Children who accepted this task were rewarded when they returned to school. This happened in a number of ways:
Children had their diaries read, were able to share them with classes, and received certificates commemorating the work that they had put into their journals.
Students shared their journals with their classes, educational units, and often at unit or house school assemblies. One of my methods was to interview children during assembly using an “question-and-answer” technique.
On occasion, local media was contacted meaning of the children were featured in the local newspaper with the work they had done being acknowledged.
Encouraging children to complete diaries commemorating their travels gives them and indelible and everlasting reminder of the undertaking. It has the added benefit of encouraging them to keep records, the strategy that will stand them in good stead throughout life.
Consider this as a strategy that may be useful during your teaching career