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Reality of being a parent And a teacher - School concerts etc

27 replies

tjah04 · 06/12/2012 08:49

I just wondered how many of you had understanding Heads of School who allowed time off to see Xmas plays and realistically how often you can expect them to allow this a year?

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mycatoscar · 06/12/2012 17:20

I've never been allowed time off for this. Staff at my daughters school are allowed. Seems it depends on the HT.

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LindyHemming · 06/12/2012 17:43

This reply has been deleted

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TheNebulousBoojum · 06/12/2012 17:48

Never, and my baby is 18 now.

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Pozzled · 06/12/2012 17:52

I work PT so I can sometimes shuffle my hours a bit. I'm very excited that I can go this year (DD1 in Reception) but it's because I'm not teaching at the time, so no cover needed. Otherwise I would offer to miss my PPA timr for the week, SMT will usually accomodate that if they can.

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MaureenMLove · 06/12/2012 17:57

I am in charge of cover in my school and I will always try to accommodate. It's very, very rare that I say it's impossible. However, it does work both ways. I do hope that if I need some help covering a class at the last minute through sudden sickness, that those that I have helped out, will step up.

Quite a lot of the time though, our teachers tend to sort it out within the department themselves. Suppose it must be more difficult in a primary school though.

You deserve to see your lo's, just as much as everyone else, regardless of the job you've got.

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incogneetow · 06/12/2012 18:13

At our school (secondary) they allow it, but only once a year - so you can't do sports day and the nativity for example. You are also encouraged to sort out your own cover if at all possible, AND you're expected to volunteer to cover for someone else in a similar circumstance..

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AViewfromtheFridge · 08/12/2012 20:12

We have an informal arrangement whereby we say we don't mind doing a couple of "favour covers" - perhaps half an hour, once a term, and in return we can take time off for things like plays or weddings.

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EvilTwins · 08/12/2012 22:29

I can go as long as there are no cover implications. Luckily DTD's school does 4 performances of the Xmas play and one corresponds with a free period. I have never been to sports day or harvest festival though Hmm

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TheFallenMadonna · 08/12/2012 22:32

Nope. Not allowed. DH goes.

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tjah04 · 09/12/2012 15:20

Thank you for your replies everyone. It has somewhat helped me make up my mind.

I am in the situation where I run a business and have 4 children. I have just finshed my degree and have always wanted to be a teacher but have been weighing up the odds between raising 4 children and being a teacher.

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Littlefish · 09/12/2012 15:24

I've never been. I work 4 days and just have to hope that some of the things like sports day, nativity, class assemblies etc. occasionally fall on my day off.

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charllie · 09/12/2012 15:27

I think it does depend on the head teacher. Where I work, we're very lucky and she would try to allow time where possible.

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TheFallenMadonna · 09/12/2012 15:28

It's the holidays that make it work. You cannot overstate the huge benefit of having (mostly) the same holidays as your DC.

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cardibach · 23/12/2012 19:31

Maureen I want to work in your school. I assume from your post that those staff are still being paid? I can't even get paid time off to take my DD to hospital appointments. DSis, in the Probation Service, can have paid time to take our parents!
I used to get time for concerts when we had a different Head. I wouldn't ask now, but luckily my DD goes to the Secondary School I work in!

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TheHappyCamper · 23/12/2012 19:50

My head was so nice when I very nervously asked if I could have an hour off for dd's nativity. She is firmly of the opinion that if we want women in the workplace we sometimes need to be abit flexible. She actually covered my lesson herself. I offered her a cover back but she declined.

I would happily cover a colleague for similar events. These are the sort of things that money can't buy and when we look back in 10 years or so we will be so glad we all helped eachother. Makes for a happier school I think.

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squirral · 25/01/2013 23:35

Rarely, completely depends on mood of head from day to day and if he does agree it's always extremely reluctantly.
On my son's 1st day at school (ever) I dropped him at the breakfast club and rushed off to school - I shall always regret not being able to take him to the classroom.

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Wolfiefan · 25/01/2013 23:37

Never.

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Tincletoes · 25/01/2013 23:41

My DH has never missed a nativity in 5 years - I suspect sports days or open afternoons would be a harder call, but if he was desperate then think it would almost always be ok

In saying that, he is rarely ill, I am PT and also have the kind of job where 9/10 I could make up my hours if eg I need to be at home with the children if they are ill, so genuinely in the last 12 years of teaching he has been off work literally for 1 day. So I guess he gets a bit of slack if he does want to go to something.

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deleted203 · 25/01/2013 23:41

It's getting harder, I think. Years ago it was fairly easy (DD1 is 21 this year). You grovelled to a couple of colleages who had a free period, 'cover my Y9 class P5 and Y10 P6 and I'll do the same for you one day'. And then you swanned off to the nativity play. Heads were fairly relaxed (in my experience) that as long as you'd got someone to cover your classes then it was ok. Nowadays (DS2 is 7) it's much harder. My school are very good actually and I have gone to nativity with their blessing and they've put cover staff in. I think the main difference in 15 years or so is that I don't think we necessarily ran it by HT. Just covered for each other fairly willingly and no one seemed to notice/care particularly. With the 'no cover' now I don't think I would dare ask a colleague to give up a free period.

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FeltOverlooked · 06/02/2013 20:39

At our school we seem to manage mostly to cover for each other BUT we nearly all have children at schools which are very, very close. e.g. I watched my son's assembly and was still at work by 9:30 am.

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HanneHolm · 07/02/2013 16:48

Oh ours does a rota!

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Hulababy · 07/02/2013 16:59

It depends on the HT in my experience.

I work in an infant school (though not as a teacher these days) and our HT allows staff to go to their own children's concerts, etc. We arrange cover often between ourselves where we can or rearrange PPA time.

It makes sense. We expect parents to come and watch our assemblies and concerts, so the HT has to allow her staff to do the same for their children too. In this way our HT is understanding and flexible - maybe as it is primary it is more likely to be flexible???

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LindyHemming · 10/02/2013 15:49

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

weblette · 10/02/2013 16:03

I have 4dcs and am currently working as a 1-1 TA to get experience before doing teacher training in a couple of years time. The pick-up logistics can be horrific but I have very good friends who will step in if needed and I make a lot of cakes to say thanks.

From what I've seen at our school the head is incredibly flexible, as are the other members of staff so people move their PPA or do extra hours to cover time out of school. Works well for everyone.

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MushroomSoup · 14/02/2013 20:58

I'm a primary HT. I insist my staff go. I'll cover myself, if necessary!

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