The
Latin word
exeat
("he/she may leave") is most commonly used to describe a period of
absence from a centre of learning.
Exeat is used in
Britain to describe weekend leave from a boarding school. It is
also used at certain colleges to define a required note to take
absence from school either for entire days, or parts of a day for
appointments, interviews, open days and other fixtures.
Students
at Oxford
University
and Cambridge University
and other British universities must also obtain
permission to leave college.
A similar method of
exeat notifications is used in many
Commonwealth schools. It is
common for Australian schools to call the long weekends of leave
enjoyed by boarders an
exeat weekend. This results in the
boarding house closing for the weekend. This typically involves an
extra day of leave associated with a public holiday to create a
long weekend. In New Zealand an
exeat may refer to a
period of day leave from a school. This is used as a way to record
the coming and going of students from the campus.
References
- Exeat — definition by the Free Online Dictionary]
- Boarding in the UK, The Hobsons UK Boarding
Schools Guide
- Exeat & Leave Weekend Request Forms,
Charterhouse School
- http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/uploads/regs_jnr_members_aug05.pdf An
example of the need for an exeat at an Oxford College
- Glossary of Cambridge jargon
- School Rules, Newington College
- Parent Handbook, p. 13, Broome Residential
College
- Wentworth College - Prospectus - Contact
Procedures