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| I lessthanthree you. |
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#16
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
From my vantage point, the school district is misusing time and effort to indiscriminantly enforce rules that were likely put in place for a completely different set of circumstances. Unless the school is handing out As the way FRC teams hand out buttons or students are diverting valuable resources away from those that really need it, then high performing students are not the problem. Leaders should model intelligent decision making rather than just dictate it from a bully pulpit.
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#17
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
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I suggest you guys present to your school board about the things you guys have done while on these "field trips". Although the school board will probably still count them as days gone, like they did for me, they probably will not be as critical that they were days that you were "gone", since you were still learning so much. I believe that until education catches up, they should allow students x # of days for out of school educational events (such as FRC regionals/champs, or other conferences). Students can learn so much more than they could ever learn in school by attending conferences taught by true professionals or events like FRC that gives hands-on experiences. I hope this helps you out Samantha! If not, I would see if your leader/county 4-H program coordinator could write a letter to the board in regards to your issue. -David Last edited by runneals : 30-05-2013 at 22:51. |
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#18
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
A couple of thoughts. First, do not deluge the school or school board with emails about why they should approve the absences unless every other recourse has been exhausted and you actually aren't walking at graduation. Even if the tactic succeeds they will resent it and it could easily cause problems for the team in future years.
As for the why in this case, I think Jimmy hit the nail on the head. A career center based team is part of the school, and they can approve it. A 4H team is probably not and the students being absent from school counts against the school and school district in terms of their evaluation by the state and federal governments. The error was likely on the part of central administrator who approved it in the first place. What probably should have been done is to have the parents for the 4H team write notes excusing their children to go to the competition ahead of time. Most schools have a process for kids going on vacation and getting pre-approved. That process generally is created with non-school sponsored "legitimate" activities from the list jcbc posted in mind. But remember that very often the schools are not making up the silly rules, only enforcing them. My first suggestion would be to take the approval you initially got to your central office (I am assuming you have already tried this with your principal) and ask "How can we work this out?" Trust me no central office wants to see some of its best students not walk at graduation. And they really don't want the bad press that can go with it. So ask what can be done and see if a workable solution can be found. It might be as simple as having all of the involved parents write a note. Or even as simple as someone at the central office approving the absence and appealing the unexcused status to the state. As a side note, I used to do tons of business travel for my work. Rules with easily foreseeable and really stupid unintended consequences are in no way limited to schools. |
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#19
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
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When I was a freshman in high school, one of my good friends missed a significant amount of school to ski competitively. At the time, the school had a policy that 15 missed days for any reason in a semester would automatically result in failing all of your classes, regardless of your grades. His parents stood up to the principal, and when the dust settled he had a 4.0 taking straight honors classes. Needless to say, he passed (and coincidentally is graduating from MIT next weekend!). I hope your administrators come around too. ![]() |
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#20
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
What I find interesting about your post is that you have the opportunity to be on a school related FIRST team, yet you choose to be on the 4H team. The administration may view this similar to someone playing a club sport rather than the school's sponsored team. While you see it as we both went to the same place, you certainly took different routes. Another thing you failed to mention what you're attendance policy is...how many absences vs unexcused absences. Did these members already have ten absences from school and these just put them over the line? Your parent has the right to pull you out of school at any point, but the school ultimately makes the decision about excused v unexcused. Also, I question the rookie status of a team that has multiple members who may have been on a FRC team before. You did not say whether this group participated in the school sponsored team at some prior point. Your school may not want to set a precedent for future years that choosing that non school team is acceptable. (Just playing devil's advocate).
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#21
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
The head guy of the school district has approved the field trips but the principal and administration at our school is being difficult.
As rlowe said this is where you need to approach this issue. You need to have a parent/coach/mentor get involved and call the 'Head Guy' and ask him to help you resolve the situation. Just remember, this could have an impact on next year as well. |
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#22
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
Ok, so here's an update on the situation... My mom and I did some digging and we found a state law that says that a student must attend 120 hours of a year class and 60 of a semester class to receive credit. Our school is set up with "blocks" of 90 min each, 4 blocks in a day. With 180 days in the school year, 90 are spent in a semester class, so 90 days times 1.5 hours equals 135 hours built into the system. Take 135 minus 120 and you get 15 hours you can miss before you "fail" a class, or by our school's system, 10 blocks of that class. For semester classes the math adds up to 5 blocks missed for that class. This wonderful law was provided for us by the "head guy" I spoke of in my original post. Now, with that new rule, we represented our case to the principal. (Just for reference, our school's rule is 7 blocks missed for a year and 3 for a semester class, so this gave us 2-3 extra blocks to work with) The days from robotics are still not excused, however, this brings my blocks to make up from 40 down to 21, a much easier number to achieve. Even better news, he is allowing us to use classes where we are excused from for seat time, for instance I recovered 3 blocks today and have brought my needed time down to 18. And the best news of all, the "head guy" has agreed to pay for any of the after school attendance retrieval sessions that we attend to, up to the number of blocks we missed from robotics. There are 4 sessions next week, from 3:30 to 6:30, so 2 blocks a session. Each block is $10 so he's willing to pay $80 for each of the students on our team that needs the attendance. Now I'm not going to be greedy and attend those alone just to make him pay, I'm using my regular school time as much as possible to make up. After all, he gave us the loophole in the school system that is allowing the three seniors to walk
![]() Now to answer some questions I saw: Yes a few of our members were once a part of a team under a school district. However, we left the team(s) (there were two) because the school district made it nearly impossible to do anything outside of build season. So no recruitment, no chairman's, no community involvement, nothing. The second of the two teams folded because the head teacher of the team was arrested for drugs and the head district leader of the team was hospitalized because of a brain tumor. Not a good year for that team. We started this rookie team as a part of 4H so we could be away from the school districts and all their red tape. Because we were able to do the work we wanted to do, we pulled off a rookie all star at Peachtree and went to nationals as a result. This just shows how much of a pain the school district is being, we were successful with our methods and yet we are being punished for it. Here's another, our parents did all send in a permission slip for the school about the trip before we went on it. It was approved by the school before we went, but when we got back it was taken back. The reason our team was suddenly not approved was because we are 4H and not the school district team, but like I said, this team was formed to be apart of the school district so we could run a team like it should be, year-round. Here's a comment about the plan to hold our own graduation ceremony, it would be really fun and would make a point, however it wouldn't give us our authentic diplomas and would be little more than a showcase. Well there seems to be just enough time left in the year to fix everything, sadly I won't be done with school until right up to the day we graduate, but at least now it looks like the three of us will walk. Any more input on the situation would be great, I love hearing how other teams sort out these types of issues. |
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#23
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Re: Going to a FIRST event is apparently not a field trip
Samantha,
Thanks for the follow-up information. I’m still confused why there is an issue with the process you used. It was the correct approach and meets all state requirements. I used the very same approach to get son’s FRC events approved. South Carolina state law does require a certain amount of attendance days per year. The amount of unexcused absences varies with the length of the course as you indicate. The key word is “unexcused.” Here’s the policy from your school’s student handbook: “With approval from the principal, students may be absent for a portion of the school day or the entire day for school-sponsored activities such as field trips, academic competitions, athletic events or other extracurricular activities. The school will not count the student absent from class/school in such cases.” So it doesn’t matter if FRC fits the definition of “field trip”, which is a school sponsored event, or “other extracurricular activity.” Here’s one definition of an excused absence from your school board’s policy: “Absences for parental approved, pre-arranged, non-school sponsored trips or activities including recognized religious holidays (pre-arranged absences must be approved by the school principal prior to the absence)” So it doesn’t matter if your FRC team is sponsored by the school or 4H, the policy is identical. Good luck! David |
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