The New Zealand Herald

Take the kids on trip but not in schooltime

-

One of the most conspicuou­s signs of rising living standards is the number of young families these days that can afford to travel overseas. This is particular­ly noticeable during the winter school holidays. This week Air New Zealand reported its busiest school holidays on record, with the number of outbound travellers up 25 per cent on five years ago.

Most of the bookings for this week and next are to Australia, followed by the United States and Fiji. While all are no doubt looking for sun and warmth at this time of the year, there is a curious difference in regional preference­s. While Fiji is the destinatio­n for most of those starting their journey in Auckland, most of those from Dunedin and Christchur­ch were heading for Queensland — and most West Coasters and Southlande­rs have gone to Rarotonga.

Wherever they have gone, these parents are treating their school-age children to experience­s previous generation­s did not have at their age. The number holidaying overseas is now five times higher than it was 40 years ago while the population has grown by about a third. Deregulati­on and airline competitio­n has made air travel cheaper, not just on new “budget” airlines but on flag carriers such as Air NZ for those who book well ahead, which many do.

“While most of the world make flight bookings four weeks before departure,” says an Air NZ executive, “we’ve found Kiwis arrange holidays two to three months in advance.” Even so, school holidays are unlikely to be the cheapest time to book a flight for the family. Cheaper travel has a downside when it entices some parents to take their children away during the school term.

It is a practice becoming all too common and schools ought to do more to discourage it. Principals say they are resigned to the fact the family has usually made the booking and will go regardless of being told of the disruption to the child’s classroom programmes. Parents convince themselves the child’s glimpse of another country will be of as much educationa­l value as the missed schooling. More credit, then, to those who have timed their trip for these two weeks. If it is costing them a little more, it is money well spent for giving their children an overseas experience at no cost to their formal education.

“Overseas experience” was once a rite of passage young Kiwis could not undertake until they had finished their education and earned some money for themselves. Today’s children are growing up in a country much more open to the world and cosmopolit­an at home.

Increasing­ly diverse immigratio­n no doubt helps explain that Asian destinatio­ns now attract more of our holiday travel and Britain much less. Bali and Vietnam are in the top 10 for the first time these holidays.

Not all families can afford an overseas holiday and probably some of those who do afford one could be spending their money more wisely. No parents should feel their child is seriously deprived if they spend the holidays in New Zealand. Plenty of domestic experience­s can be just as much fun.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand