logo
Influencer mum, Sarah Day, baffled after school denied her kids leave from school for holiday

Influencer mum, Sarah Day, baffled after school denied her kids leave from school for holiday

Herald Sun09-07-2025
Don't miss out on the headlines from Parenting. Followed categories will be added to My News.
When I was a child, my parents pulled me out of school for a two-week holiday in February.
The back-to-school photos were just snapped, and I barely knew my teacher's name, when we'd ditch class for the NSW coast.
Craving a beach holiday, my country-based parents saved their money and any disruption of the festive schedule by taking a summer holiday in term.
Every single year.
Mum didn't ask the principal for permission. A handwritten note was put in my lunch box, with hopes it would reach my teacher.
Sarah spoke about the holiday on her social media. Picture: Instagram / Sarah's Day
RELATED: Parents notice strange detail on school timetable
The 90s were a simpler time. For almost everything, including attitudes towards missing school for holidays.
Just ask Aussie vlogger Sarah Stevenson.
The influencer, known as Sarah's Day, was at the airport heading off on a Fiji holiday when she received an email from her six-year-old son Fox's school.
The NSW primary school informed the cookbook author her kindergartener's five-day absence had not been 'approved'.
Sarah took to Instagram and vented to her 1.2 million followers about the school policy – including the need to show the principal proof of flights.
'He's only missing five days of school. Anyway, day one of the trip I get an email back… it says Fox's leave hasn't been approved,' she says in a clip posted by Outspoken the Podcast.
'Yes, I want him to learn how to read and write and be in a classroom, but I haven't pulled him out of school for a month. "Anyway, whatever. Love school.'
Outspoken the Podcast asked followers if it was OK to take kids out of school for holidays, with most Instagram comments in support of Sarah.
Former MAFS bride Alyssa Barmonde wrote. 'Honestly, restricting when kids can and can't go on a holiday is ridiculous. Travelling and being cultured is a way better life experience than missing a week of ABCs.'
Another mum said, 'I'm all for taking your kids out for holidays, real-life experiences AND family time'. A second parent admitted, 'we have to apply for approval at our primary school, but I would still go even if it wasn't approved.'
Want to join the family? Sign up to our Kidspot newsletter for more stories like this.
So, what are the rules around skipping school for holidays?
State and territories have different 'exemptions' for attendance, but the law is the same – parents must send compulsory school-aged children to school every day.
In NSW, both state and independent schools do not consider travel during term time as a 'justified' reason for absence.
The NSW Education Department's 'justified' exemptions include health concerns, religious holidays and competing in elite arts and sport. If a principal declines a parent's reason for an absence, it's recorded as 'unjustified'.
Students in Victorian schools need to get principal approval and obtain a Student Learning Absence Plan if they want an extended holiday.
The Catholic Education Office and Education Queensland do consider holidaying a 'reasonable' excuse for absence.
Are holidays in school time beneficial?
It's an open secret at the school gate that many parents purposely book trips outside school holiday periods to beat crowds and inflated accommodation and flight costs.
Dates during the term can also be more convenient to visit loved ones overseas.
Charles Darwin University lecturer and former primary school teacher, Khushi Chauhan, pulled her son out of preschool to visit grandparents and plans to do the same in school.
'I'm all for experiential and incidental learning. Kids gain so much more during their travels,' she said
'Younger children learn more when they're out and about. The teacher in me never leaves, I'm always trying to make it a learning experience.'
Timing of trips is important, Ms Chauhan explained, as disrupting the start of a school year can unsettle young kids, and older students might not want to miss social and academic events.
The end of the year is a more relaxed time to miss a few days, as 'not much learning is going on' once grades are in, and kids can feel Christmas.
Sarah said her son's leave was not approved. Picture: Instagram
RELATED: School holiday envy is very, very real
Do students suffer by missing school?
There's a reason schools are vigilant about attendance. Nationally, attendance levels are on a downward trend, and studies show students fall behind when they miss class.
The Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership reports that lower attendance, even missing one day a fortnight, can negatively affect academic achievement.
In the last five years, the numbers of students attending 90 per cent or more of school days in government, catholic, and independent schools has declined significantly.
According to the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA), the 2024 attendance levels were 59.8 per cent – a sharp drop from 74.9 per cent in 2019.
President of the Australian Primary Principals Association Angela Falkenberg says attendance 'directly improves a child's future life outcomes'.
'School leaders understand the well-researched benefits of regular attendance,' she said.
'We do not wish to dilute the clear message that every day matters.'
Ms Falkenberg encourages families to take holidays during designated school breaks.
'A holiday is often in addition to time away for illness, family events or even birthdays - further disrupting the continuity of learning,' she said.
If a child is already anxious about school and testing or has school refusal tendencies, a mid-term break could also reinforce behaviour and mental health challenges.
Should we feel bad if we have a holiday in term?
If you've planned a trip outside of school holidays - don't feel bad.
Parenting educator Genevieve Muir acknowledges term time might be the only dates that work for families because of finances, location or work leave.
'Especially in the early primary years, kids get so much out of shared family experiences like travel. It's not just the break from the norm… it's the connection, the exposure to different environments, and the chance to slow down together,' she says.
'Don't feel guilty if you've made a thoughtful decision to take your child out of school once in a while, especially in the early years. Just be open to working with your school and recognising that they're managing a lot too.'
As a mum of four boys, Ms Muir understands why schools must enforce boundaries.
'The scrutiny around holiday absences is less about punishing families and more about trying to support learning and keep things equitable for staff and students,' the author said.
While putting in leave requests for young students might feel tedious, or even nerve- wracking, it's important to keep an open dialogue with schools.
'The expectation that parents complete an exemption for reasons such as family travel … is part of government or system policy and a requirement for school principals to enact,' Ms Falkenberg assured.
Ms Muir agrees parents need to follow school protocol. 'Sometimes schools need to deny a request for leave outside term as part of policy. This is to stop an avalanche of parents taking holidays consistently in term time.
'This doesn't mean you can't go; it's just marked as an unapproved absence.'
Originally published as Mum baffled after school denied her kids leave from school for holiday
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ansett Australia revived as AI-powered travel platform two decades after carrier's collapse
Ansett Australia revived as AI-powered travel platform two decades after carrier's collapse

7NEWS

time2 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Ansett Australia revived as AI-powered travel platform two decades after carrier's collapse

The Ansett name 'is back', but not as Australians will remember the former airline. Ansett Australia was once the country's second-largest carrier but collapsed into administration after suffering financial troubles in 2001. Its final flight was recorded early the following year. Now, more than 20 years later, the brand is being revived not as an airline but as an AI-powered holiday booking platform called Ansett Travel. Melbourne-based entrepreneur Constantine Frantzeskos said it was designed to be a 'hyper-personalised' travel agent that suggests trips and itineraries based on your preferences, calendar events and budgets. 'I didn't just acquire a lapsed trademark and domain, I resurrected trust embedded deep in collective memory,' Frantzeskos said on Monday. 'The original Ansett served Australians beautifully for 65 years before collapsing in 2002, leaving a void in reliability and brand warmth. 'I believe that legacy still matters, and that it's deserving of being reimagined for modern travellers. 'Ansett Travel isn't about replicating the past, it's about re‑engineering it through AI as the core, not as an afterthought.' What Ansett Travel will offer Frantzeskos has previously worked with Emirates, Dubai Tourism and Visit Victoria, and this time partnered with Victorian travel start-up Travlr. He said the new platform is 'like the Costco of travel'. It is open to everyone 'but if you want the really good stuff' — flights, hotels and holidays at near-wholesale prices — you will need to join Ansett VIP, he said. An Ansett VIP membership is $99 a year. Not all AI features are up and running but Frantzeskos said plans for things like auto-generated itineraries, pre-trip alerts, and personalised loyalty experiences are on the cards. 'Today's travel platforms are reactive,' he said. 'You search, compare, click. Ansett seeks to flip that model. 'It's designed to anticipate when users need a break – school holidays, anniversaries, executive downtime, great weather for a weekend away – and offer options before you even think to ask. 'It's not replacing human agents; it's doing what scale, data and logic do best – with finesse, not friction.' The website is already live and offering travel deals for destinations including Las Vegas, Bali, Tokyo and Athens. Before its collapse, Ansett reportedly flew about 10 million passengers annually. More than 16,000 jobs were lost as a result of the company's downfall.

Singer Ed Sheeran reveals disturbing truth about life in the spotlight
Singer Ed Sheeran reveals disturbing truth about life in the spotlight

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

Singer Ed Sheeran reveals disturbing truth about life in the spotlight

Singer Ed Sheeran has revealed how his extreme stardom continues to put his family in danger. The global superstar, who recently announced his 2026 Australian tour, revealed on Sunday that he's been forced to employ extensive security measures to protect his children from extreme fans. Sheeran shares daughter Lyra, four, and Jupiter, three, with Cherry Seaborn. 'It's things that people don't really even take into account,' Sheeran told 60 Minutes. 'Like kidnap threats and s**t like that. We've had attempted break-ins, things left on my car. 'It's way more sinister than just fans turning up and wanting selfies.' Sheeran is fiercely protective of his daughters and does not allow fans to take photos of them. 'I've had some real arguments before,' he said. 'I'm fine with taking pictures, but I just think it's weird with a four-year-old and a three-year-old.' But Sheeran accepts: 'To be within the public sphere, you have to take it all, the good and the bad.' 'We have a level of security that probably won't change until I pass away. That's just our life now.' The English singer-songwriter returns to Perth for the first Aussie leg of his Loop Tour in January 2026, marking his first national performances since 2023. Announcing 11 shows across Australia and New Zealand in the summer, the four-time Grammy winner will touch down in WA for a singular Optus Stadium performance on January 31. He will then head east for two shows in each of Sydney, Brisbane, and Melbourne, before concluding the all-new tour with a one-off performance in Adelaide on March 5. Sheeran's forthcoming project Play — his eighth studio album — is due for release on September 12, with tracks Old Phone, Azizam and Sapphire already released. The album signals the conclusion of his three-year, 168-show Mathematics Tour that breached Aussie shores in 2023. 'Starting a brand new tour next year called the LOOP tour. New stage, new tricks, new set up, new songs and all the classics added in,' Sheeran told fans upon the tour announcement. Sheeran has impressively sold in excess of 2.5 million tickets in his previous jaunts through Australia and New Zealand. General sale tickets will begin from 3pm WST July 29, with pre-sale for Telstra and Frontier members staggered from July 25.

Ed Sheeran's disturbing truth about life in the spotlight
Ed Sheeran's disturbing truth about life in the spotlight

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Ed Sheeran's disturbing truth about life in the spotlight

Singer Ed Sheeran has revealed how his extreme stardom continues to put his family in danger. The global superstar, who recently announced his 2026 Australian tour, revealed on Sunday that he's been forced to employ extensive security measures to protect his children from extreme fans. Sheeran shares daughter Lyra, four, and Jupiter, three, with Cherry Seaborn. 'It's things that people don't really even take into account,' Sheeran told 60 Minutes. 'Like kidnap threats and s**t like that. We've had attempted break-ins, things left on my car. 'It's way more sinister than just fans turning up and wanting selfies.' Ed Sheeran arriving in Perth. Credit: Ian Munro / The West Australian Sheeran is fiercely protective of his daughters and does not allow fans to take photos of them. 'I've had some real arguments before,' he said. 'I'm fine with taking pictures, but I just think it's weird with a four-year-old and a three-year-old.' But Sheeran accepts: 'To be within the public sphere, you have to take it all, the good and the bad.' 'We have a level of security that probably won't change until I pass away. That's just our life now.' The English singer-songwriter returns to Perth for the first Aussie leg of his Loop Tour in January 2026, marking his first national performances since 2023. Announcing 11 shows across Australia and New Zealand in the summer, the four-time Grammy winner will touch down in WA for a singular Optus Stadium performance on January 31. He will then head east for two shows in each of Sydney, Brisbane, and Melbourne, before concluding the all-new tour with a one-off performance in Adelaide on March 5. Ed Sheeran performs in Wellington Credit: Zakary Walters/Ed Sheeran / Instagram Sheeran's forthcoming project Play — his eighth studio album — is due for release on September 12, with tracks Old Phone, Azizam and Sapphire already released. The album signals the conclusion of his three-year, 168-show Mathematics Tour that breached Aussie shores in 2023. 'Starting a brand new tour next year called the LOOP tour. New stage, new tricks, new set up, new songs and all the classics added in,' Sheeran told fans upon the tour announcement. Sheeran has impressively sold in excess of 2.5 million tickets in his previous jaunts through Australia and New Zealand. General sale tickets will begin from 3pm WST July 29, with pre-sale for Telstra and Frontier members staggered from July 25.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store