ChatterBank0 min ago
Is It Fair For Schools To Organise Trips Abroad?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -englan d-leeds -330478 17
I would have thought this is an extreme example which is very unfair to those who are less well off. Is any school trip abroad whose cost may run into hundreds of pounds fair to those who cant afford to go? Why cant they visit places in the UK?
I would have thought this is an extreme example which is very unfair to those who are less well off. Is any school trip abroad whose cost may run into hundreds of pounds fair to those who cant afford to go? Why cant they visit places in the UK?
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If there was a day trip costing £25, there would still be some kids who could not go as their parents could not afford it.
If you think the school trip to Barbados is expensive, ten years ago,the year before my daughter started middle school, that school organised a trip to Australia and Fiji for £3,000!
If there was a day trip costing £25, there would still be some kids who could not go as their parents could not afford it.
If you think the school trip to Barbados is expensive, ten years ago,the year before my daughter started middle school, that school organised a trip to Australia and Fiji for £3,000!
I went on an exchange trip to Germany. It taught me a lot - including realising the reality of the East/West border - walking up to a lot of barbed wire under the scrutiny of hard-eyed soldiers armed with kalashnikovs (which one of them kept pointing at us) was a reality check at 14! I had to save-up/earn half the cost, plus provide my spending-money and it was a great help towards my G.C.E.. Also good to entertain 'Gudrun' and learn about hostessing.
First time I had been away on my own and I was homesick! I think that all of my class managed to afford it - but it was an exchange and therefore economical.
My granddaughter has just been told 'No, you cannot go on the skiing trip'. It's about £1K - a ridiculous amount. She's got over it. I think that enjoyment-only trips are rather different. My kids holidayed in UK until we saved up enough to get the caravan across the Channel when they were 14/16. They were the only kids in their classes who knew UK geography and basic historical locations!
As a PS - I don't know about this trip, but on the only trips I have taken with pupils - all relatively local, but 1 residential for a week, which meant I had to desert my family and organise my kids' care, I worked very, very hard, was responsible 24/24 and wasn't paid any more. The one under discussion may be different of course - but I would think that my experience is more the norm.
Fair? It's as fair as life gets.
First time I had been away on my own and I was homesick! I think that all of my class managed to afford it - but it was an exchange and therefore economical.
My granddaughter has just been told 'No, you cannot go on the skiing trip'. It's about £1K - a ridiculous amount. She's got over it. I think that enjoyment-only trips are rather different. My kids holidayed in UK until we saved up enough to get the caravan across the Channel when they were 14/16. They were the only kids in their classes who knew UK geography and basic historical locations!
As a PS - I don't know about this trip, but on the only trips I have taken with pupils - all relatively local, but 1 residential for a week, which meant I had to desert my family and organise my kids' care, I worked very, very hard, was responsible 24/24 and wasn't paid any more. The one under discussion may be different of course - but I would think that my experience is more the norm.
Fair? It's as fair as life gets.
well talbot i can only speak for myself, but basically the teacher have responsibility in loco parentis for 24/7 throughout the whole holiday. I certainly wouldn't fancy going on holiday with a bunch of teenagers, no matter what the destination!
Teenagers are on the whole little sh!ts, and frankly i would not want to give up any of my family time to go on holiday with them, let alone pay for the "privelege"
Teenagers are on the whole little sh!ts, and frankly i would not want to give up any of my family time to go on holiday with them, let alone pay for the "privelege"
It's crap being the teacher on a school trip - it's stressful and 24 hours a day, full on. One of the them always lands up in A & E, one manages to get ratted and spends the evening telling you that he loves you while chucking up, someone gets bitten by a stray dog and convinces everyone they've got flipping rabies, one of the girls (at least) cries every night for their mum, someone loses their wallet, purse, passport, etc, etc.
I agree this trip is way over the top but no one has to go on it.
I agree this trip is way over the top but no one has to go on it.
Totally agree with the comments about going on school trips as a teacher, it's a nightmare, especially adolescent girls, I can recall spending hours in the small hours with a sniffling girl, often being egged on by her friends. Also recall, if your chid breaks a leg running around on your family holiday, that's an accident, on a school trip is negligence and a nice little earner.
A friend took a ski-trip and the Head got a call from him Do you want the good news or the bad? Oh God, give me the bad news first. One of the girls has broken a leg on the slopes. What's the good news then? It's your daughter, so there'll be no trouble.
A friend took a ski-trip and the Head got a call from him Do you want the good news or the bad? Oh God, give me the bad news first. One of the girls has broken a leg on the slopes. What's the good news then? It's your daughter, so there'll be no trouble.
My kids in primary school go to an outdoor activities residential (£150 for two nights) and London (£300 for 3 nights) plus day trips here and there. Boy #1 is going on an eight night PGL in the south of France next month for £720 - our choice to let him go. I'm saving now so that the others can go when they get to secondary school (again, our choice). Hats of to the teachers who take them, it's no holiday for them.
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