Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
how could i forget jimmy krankie
more importantly, wtf I am doing here
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
blue matt
how could i forget jimmy krankie
more importantly, wtf I am doing here
Ruining another thread.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
blue matt
the only experience i have with dwarfs and Midgets are the Simpsons
Sorry, but I certainly don't want an experience with you and your pole, thanks all the same....
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
jon1959
Please don't - not again!
:hehe:
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Colonel Cærdiffi
Ruining another thread.
whats wrong with Jimmy ? ? ?
groundbreaking humour at times, Infact i am sure recently, you must have stolen some of the Krankies material :wave:
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
blue matt
whats wrong with Jimmy ? ? ?
groundbreaking humour at times, Infact i am sure recently, you must have stolen some of the Krankies material :wave:
I have no idea what any of that means but I'm not hoping for an explanation either tbh.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Philbccfc
one or two days before term ends, does it harm their education, does it matter.
I'm guessing that your parents took you out of school and hence you missed the punctuation lesson?
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Tall Midget
Just as long as you don't pity me! I can endure 'imp', but not said in a pitying way...
I pity you for your location not your ability to walk under tables.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Philbccfc
ok i wont, .....btw won`t what?
Reason i posted , just read an article about pupils being excluded for wearing shorts on the hottest day, a while ago some "experts" were saying even one day taken could ruin a childs chances at school. i suppose being excluded doesn`t count as a holiday, (well not for the parents anyway)
I think they were vastly underestimating it.
14 seconds missed is all it takes to go from an Oxbridge candidate to a bin man.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philbccfc
one or two days before term ends, does it harm their education, does it matter.
The sort of selfish parents who do it are not interested in their children's education anyway. :thumbup:
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Parents who keep moving house so their child has to keep changing schools are far worse than those who let them miss the odd day or two at the end of term.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Tall Midget
My daughter is a teacher on the South Coast. A week ago, she and her children stayed with us in Tongwnlais, taking advantage of a two-day inset period.
Have the prospects of these poor children been ruined by the need to train up teachers?
Surely if your daughter is a teacher, she should have been in school during the inset days, having training, not having a "jolly" to your place
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
S'all Good Man
Surely if your daughter is a teacher, she should have been in school during the inset days, having training, not having a "jolly" to your place
No she was having a jolly in Ton..:-)
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
PerryJason
The sort of selfish parents who do it are not interested in their children's education anyway. :thumbup:
Codswallop
Quote:
Originally Posted by
CCFC CASUAL
Parents who keep moving house so their child has to keep changing schools are far worse than those who let them miss the odd day or two at the end of term.
Yeah, people in the armed forces and other people who have to move house because of their work, what's wrong with these people? just leave your kids where they are ffs, they will thank you in the long run.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Tall Midget
No she was having a jolly in Ton..:-)
So instead of 1 child not getting the required education because they skipped school to go on holiday, a whole class has been effected as she is not having the education needed to do her job
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PerryJason
The sort of selfish parents who do it are not interested in their children's education anyway. :thumbup:
This.
Your son or daughter's first 18 years of their life is not for enjoying. It is not for having fun. It is not for family bonding. It is for education, education, and education. This is the only way they'll be anything but a lollipop lady in later life.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Ring_Peace
I'm guessing that your parents took you out of school and hence you missed the punctuation lesson?
care to correct it then.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
Tall Midget
Do you have any idea how offensive it is to describe me as a dwarf when I am a midget?
"A dwarf is an extremely short adult who is less than 58 inches tall. The word midget is considered derogatory and offensive. Both words describe a short person, but refer to different physical characteristics and genetic conditions.
"Midget" refers to a person who is very short, but normally proportioned. The term midget is now rarely used and is considered offensive. But its usage was very common until the end of the twentieth century. It has given way to "short person" or "little person".
"Dwarf" refers to a person with one of several varieties of a specific genetic condition called dwarfism. A dwarf has disproportion of body parts. This is generally caused by a genetic or nutritional disability. Any adult human below the height of 4'10" (147 cm) is considered a dwarf. With reference to legends or folklore, a dwarf is considered a legendary creature resembling a tiny old man, who lives in the depths of the earth and guards buried treasure."
I am certainly not a tiny old man, who lives in the depths of the earth and guards buried treasure.
who was better in a ruck, legolas or aragorn?
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
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Originally Posted by
TISS
Who was better in a ruck, legolas or aragorn?
Undoubtedly, Aragorn would wipe the floor with Legolas blonde haired extinctions and by the time he was done stomping a mud hole in Legalos Elrond will say it was my turn to kick the princes candy ass.
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Haven't a clue what ^^^^^^^means....but it seems definitive......:hehe:
Re: Parents who take their children out of school for holidays
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tall Midget
My daughter is a teacher on the South Coast. A week ago, she and her children stayed with us in Tongwnlais, taking advantage of a two-day inset period.
Have the prospects of these poor children been ruined by the need to train up teachers?
Shirley, if your daughter is a teacher then she should most certainly have attended the inset days?
Will her parents be fined or imprisoned just as the parents of a pupil may be if the pupil misses school?