On one hand, I do agree that students shouldn't stay home to prepare for a sac (as I remember having 3 sacs + house debating final on the same day) but the reality is, some people do it. It works for them, and they may not view it as cheating.
Paulsterio,
Is your view informed from your narrow perspective of someone who did not SERVE his school with an average 15 hour per week commitment throughout his VCE year in representative and extra-curricular DUTIES as I did?
Let me get this straight. It is OK for me to SERVE my school, but you think it's unfair that I should care about my academic results? What else do you want me to do to even out my unfair advantage? Sit my VCAA exam blind-folded perhaps?
If your school were to ask you why you decided to take a day off, would you openly say "I took a day off to study for a SAC" - if this were the case, some schools would have issues with that or would you pull an excuse like "I was unwell"? If it's the latter, why is it justified to lie to your school?
If I took a day off school and explained to them that I was studying for a SAC, they ARE perfectly happy with that explanation. Maybe it is just my school, but they understood especially in the Term 3 crunch times. Hell, I've not gone to class before (told the teacher I am studying in a quieter environment) and they were happy about it. In the end of the day, they want the best result from you, and if you cannot get it in the environment you are in, at least you are being proactive to change the scenery to better your own progress.
My perspective has changed on this a little bit since reading all these replies. Didn't think that would happen!
While I did view taking a day off as "unfair" I never thought it was cheating as such. But now that Russ mentioned it, you do miss out on whatever was taught in class that day, so it does sort of balance out.
The way I think of it now is basically, the SAC(s) you have the next day would have a straight and direct impact on your SS and subsequently your ATAR. The things you miss the day prior to the SAC can be either retaught or you can simply seek assistance for whatever you missed out on the next day... It's worth it, given that missing a class won't affect you in the long run because you can pretty much learn what the teacher taught the very next day if you wish. But because you took the day off, you're more confident for the SAC and will perform better as a result.
At my school, they've always explicitly stated that leave can only be taken if ill, and you have a med cert, or if a family related issue has come up (death etc). I think, if they do know the student is a hard worker, they would definitely allow them to take the day off tbh... It's just that if you take more than 4 days, you'll reach under the 90% required attendance.
Interesting can of worms this
