"I was educated during the holidays at Eton."
Osbert Sitwell
The single line of justification for the state robbing families of their money for daring not to attend school for two weeks is that it affects students' exam performance. Newsflash: it doesn’t. The only data that supports the “grades affected” argument comes from the government itself and was conveniently released shortly before Platt was defeated in court.
As a teacher myself, all my experience and instinct tells me the following are the significant factors affecting student performance:
1) The natural intelligence and aptitude of a child.
Smarter students will catch up on any work they’ve missed. “Middle” students will endevour to do so. There may be a small case here for not taking “middle” students out of class for too long shortly before a major exam, but more on that later.
2) The stability of the student’s home life.
And guess what? The annual family holiday is usually symptomatic of a happy, stable family which will have far greater influence on a child’s academic performance in the long run. It’s also proven that a change of scenery and a break in routine can aid long-term memory-retention.
3) The attitude of the pupil’s parents.
This is where it becomes crucial that all parents are not tarnished with the same brush. I’ve dealt with lazy, despicable parents. I have vivid memories of one parent in particular whose children used to miss at least one day of school each week. When I attempted to speak with their mother about it, she laughed. Everything about this parent sent out a message: she was lazy, she wanted to do what she wanted, when she wanted and her children were baggage. Her two daughters would regularly finish bottom in any test.
These are the kind of parents who deserve fines. These are the children that teachers should be indignant over. To suggest that families who want to spend two weeks’ quality time together, perhaps learning a little of a foreign language or visiting a famous landmark - isn’t that educational in itself? Aren’t British schools drooling over ‘diversity’? - deserve the same punishment and labeling as negligent parents isn’t just incorrect, it’s insulting.
From the limited amount of time I’ve researched this it seems most teachers are falling down on the side of the state. This is no surprise, not only do they not want to bite the hand that feeds, some have also happily wandered down the path the British educational system seems happy to follow: the path that places the schools as moral jury, deciding carefully what is right or wrong, moral and immoral, important or unimportant. I still believe parents get first call on that.
There is of course one caveat in the fining system: there are several exemptions in place such as vacations of "religious importance" among other things. In this I see a wonderful opportunity for teachers supporting the fines system to show their dedication and compassion: colleagues, why not give up half of your Easter holidays holding extra classes for those who missed out during term? It would be the perfect chance to back up all the wonderful talk of dedication and concern you espouse so often, and the students go unpunished for missing previous classes. Everybody wins!
What time can we expect you in?
John Platt has a Facebook Page for people who support his fight against school fines.