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Secondary education

Holidaying before GCSE's?

52 replies

TreacherousPissFlap · 26/10/2019 11:15

Yay or nay?
Thinking of possibly Easter holidays or May half term for a few days. DS is adamant that it needs to be revision only (school is very academic and quite rightly are pressing home the importance of exams)

I feel that a break would do him good. He can revise either morning or afternoon and we can go out in the other half. It will obviously be a very different holiday to what we normally have but it's only a one off. OTOH, it seems a bit harsh to drag him off on a holiday he doesn't want to go on Shock

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weeblefeet · 26/10/2019 11:20

Schools usually do Easter and half term revision sessions and May half term is in the middle of the exam period so definitely not

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RedskyToNight · 26/10/2019 11:20

Well my son is work avoidant, so there is no way I would put the opportunity of distraction in his way.

It sounds like your DS is more committed, so I'd maybe consider a few days over Easter (although our school runs revision sessions over the Easter holiday - does yours?). May half term would be a definite no - they wouldn't get any benefit of the holiday if they are revising/stressing about exams half the time!
But equally if he said he didn't want to as he wanted to focus on revision, I would absolutely accept that.

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xyzandabc · 26/10/2019 11:22

Maybe a few days at Easter just for a change of scenery but nothing big. May half term is in the middle of exams, not before, so definitely not then.

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Berthatydfil · 26/10/2019 11:25

He doesn’t want to go away. Don’t go. Exam season is stressful enough without making it more difficult for him

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Branleuse · 26/10/2019 11:26

Easter maybe but definitely not May half term. Why risk it. Could be the difference between a grade

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Answerthequestion · 26/10/2019 11:26

Absolutely not. I wouldn’t have considered a break in either of those breaks. The last thing they need is disruption or a change of scene, it’s a time to be at home I’m familiar surroundings

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BendingSpoons · 26/10/2019 11:29

Don't go. He doesn't want to. When I did my GCSEs I revised at Easter. I did still do other things in the afternoon but I would have felt more pressured trying to enjoy a holiday and work. Do you have other children? A few days away after GCSEs would be nice if possible.

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LittleAndOften · 26/10/2019 11:35

If he doesn't want to, don't force it. Be proud that you have such a lovely, conscientious son! May half term has exams either side, so that would be particularly bad timing.

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TreacherousPissFlap · 26/10/2019 12:03

Hmm, perhaps I am being utterly unreasonable then!

We already have a bit of a special holiday planned for when the exams are over so it's not like we will be going without a break.

He's revising already, daily sessions as per the revision planner - I definitely don't recognise myself in my own dear child Grin

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TwoRedShoes · 26/10/2019 12:06

This reply has been withdrawn

The OP has privacy concerns and so we've agreed to take this down.

MissMarpletheMurderer · 26/10/2019 12:06

Our school do Easter revision and teaching sessions. Yabu

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Pieceofpurplesky · 26/10/2019 12:08

I am taking DS away for a couple of days to somewhere relevant to his course (and somewhere we both want to go). We are going to Berlin and will visit all the places linked to WW2. We will also see the city and get time to chill a bit.

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pointythings · 26/10/2019 12:19

It depends on the child and you and he between you have to be the judge of that. My DDs were both the burn yourself out type so we did go away for a week at Easter with zero revision, and we had 2 days at May half term. The break worked as a reset and allowed them to go in hard afterwards and feel refreshed. They both did extremely well. Thing is, they both wanted to go, recognising it would be good for them. If not revising is going to stress your DS out then I wouldn't go.

In school holiday revision sessions aren't compulsory, btw.

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RuthW · 26/10/2019 12:23

My dd wouldn't go on hol from feb in the years of all her exams. No was should you make him. It's all about the revision

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LoveGrowsWhere · 26/10/2019 12:27

It's a half-baked holiday if you're planning half of each day revising. I wouldn't go as I think on this the DC opinion carries weight.

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LolaSmiles · 26/10/2019 12:35

I always tell my students to revise little and often throughout the year, so they can make time for hobbies, friends and family time. It's so important that they maintain a reasonable balance and perspective during their GCSE year whilst working hard.

Cramming isn't effective revision and I suspect the millions of hours it's more about students feeling like they're doing something, regardless of how effective it is. If he uses more effective revision strategies for example, he could learn more quicker and have a bit more free time

I'd avoid May half term, but a short break in Easter for a diligent student who has kept on top of their revision would probably be a helpful break (as long as they can switch off and not spend the whole weekend worrying about revision).

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TeenPlusTwenties · 26/10/2019 12:53

A short break at Easter 4 or 5 days, maybe to recharge before the final slog, but I wouldn't commit to anything more than that. You can always do a last minute 3 days if he wants at the time.
This definitely needs to be led by the DC, if they don't want to go, then don't go.

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Theovertoad · 26/10/2019 16:49

Agree with teen
A few days tops .. booked last minute and if *they feel they need a break and can factor it in.
They’ll finish school as soon as exams are over so you could book some time away before summer holidays start?

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TreePeepingWatcher · 26/10/2019 18:05

Revision sessions by school are usually the first week of Easter holidays. There is no way Ds would have given up an opportunity to study. Dropping a few marks on each paper does affect grades. As Ds's friends found on on results day. Maybe have a look at grade boundaries to see how tight some of them were.

I wouldn't want to put my children in a position of wondering if they hadn't gone on holiday would their grade be higher?

Easter is an opportunity to revise for exams that fall before May half term, so in Ds's case

2 papers for English Lit,
2 papers for Computer Science,
3 paper 1s for science (Biology, Chemistry, Physics)
1 maths paper.

May half term is smack bang in the middle of GCSEs and an opportunity to revise for the exams coming up afterwards. Which were

3 history papers,
2 maths papers,
3 science papers
3 German papers,
2 English Lang papers
2 Statistics papers.

Maybe when you see it laid out like that it might make you see how many exams they do. And yes, Ds did achieve incredible grades, but he worked for them.

Ds then enjoyed 10 weeks off school from the end of GCSEs until he started sixth form. That is the time for a holiday.

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TeenPlusTwenties · 26/10/2019 18:26

I think any breaks Easter/May should be viewed as what down time will benefit the DC, rather than 'family holiday'. Working full pace from Feb half term to end June isn't sensible, but different DC will need their down time in different ways.
We were worried re ramping back up again in the May half term if too long a break were taken. For DD we felt it better to have a couple of single days off but otherwise keep going at a steady pace with an eye on the end as motivation to keep going.

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crazycrofter · 26/10/2019 18:27

DD’s school (highly academic, more than 90% grades 7-9) don’t organise revision sessions in the holidays. They do organise school trips though, including the Spanish exchange and the silver D of E expedition, both of which are for year 11s and fall in the Easter holidays this year.

Therefore I assume they think there should be some balance, kids need a bit of a break etc. Dd will be away three days on the D of E expedition. There will still be plenty of time for revision. I really don’t think life should be put on hold all year!

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Punxsutawney · 26/10/2019 18:37

Ds is year 11 and we are going abroad for Christmas this year. His school don't organise holiday revision but we won't go away again after this until next summer. Ds has had a terribly stressful 18 months and he won't be reaching his potential in his gcses or managing lots of revision but we will be at home and I will be encouraging as much as I can.

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ErrolTheDragon · 26/10/2019 18:45

DD didn't want to go away on holiday in the Easter and May halfterms before GCSEs, AS and A levels - so we just had a few good days out to break things up a bit. This worked well for her.

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HugoSpritz · 26/10/2019 19:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

BlaueLagune · 26/10/2019 19:28

We didn't go away in May half term because we thought DS would be revising. Tee hee. He didn't do much at all (well not that I saw, we could have easily gone away for part of it, but maybe the downtime was helpful).

Is your son doing a language? It might be nice to go to that country for a few days at Easter if so.

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