- Jul 7, 2003
- 47,630
I doubt very much that missing a week of school for a reasonably well educated nine year old will make a huge difference in the grand scheme of things.
But those trying to cite the "educational value" of taking them on holiday, come on, behave Taking them trekking in Peru, or exploring the sites of ancient Rome: fair enough. Sitting in a pool in Spain while your parents sunbathe with a beer & a plate of chips, or wandering around Disney World for a week doesn't quite hit the "educational" mark from where I'm sitting. Admit it: you want a holiday. Absolutely fine. But please let's not dress it up as anything else
PS: having worked for tour operators in the past, it's not so much prices being inflated for peak season. The peak season prices are the ones that cover their costs. The low season prices are the loss leaders, the ones that they slash to try and shift stock when demand is low. Don't imagine for one second that if schools suddenly binned fixed holiday dates, that everyone would be paying less for their family holidays. It's as likely to mean, quite simply, that those going in May and June (for example) would pay more.
But those trying to cite the "educational value" of taking them on holiday, come on, behave Taking them trekking in Peru, or exploring the sites of ancient Rome: fair enough. Sitting in a pool in Spain while your parents sunbathe with a beer & a plate of chips, or wandering around Disney World for a week doesn't quite hit the "educational" mark from where I'm sitting. Admit it: you want a holiday. Absolutely fine. But please let's not dress it up as anything else
PS: having worked for tour operators in the past, it's not so much prices being inflated for peak season. The peak season prices are the ones that cover their costs. The low season prices are the loss leaders, the ones that they slash to try and shift stock when demand is low. Don't imagine for one second that if schools suddenly binned fixed holiday dates, that everyone would be paying less for their family holidays. It's as likely to mean, quite simply, that those going in May and June (for example) would pay more.