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1994-09-09
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<text id=94TT0991>
<title>
Aug. 01, 1994: Education:Everyone Into the School!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EDUCATION, Page 48
Everyone Into the School!
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Summer vacation isn't what it used to be, as more districts
experiment with year-round classes
</p>
<p>By Sophfronia Scott Gregory--Reported by Ann Blackman/Mooresville and Bonnie I. Rochman/Atlanta
</p>
<p> Summertime, and most American schoolchildren are taking it
easy: hitting the beach, going to summer camp or just sitting
around the house bored out of their skull. But for kids like
Amy Simon, 9, of Mooresville, North Carolina, a new school year
is just beginning. Last week Amy was in her air-conditioned
fourth-grade science class at Park View Elementary, mixing together
polyvinyl and Borax to make red, green and yellow slime. "If
you have the whole summer off, you get bored," she says. Instead
of a long summer vacation, Amy now goes to school year-round,
with shorter but more frequent break periods. "Just when I get
tired of school, it's time for a break," says Amy. Her next
respite will be a three-week vacation in September, when most
kids her age are trudging back to class.
</p>
<p> The reason for the seemingly topsy-turvy schedule is that Park
View is one of 1,905 schools in the U.S. that are in session
year-round. Praised by educators and parents as a way for students
to learn better and schools to operate more efficiently, year-round
schooling is steadily catching on. As of June 30, 1.4 million
students were enrolled in year-round schools, from rural North
Carolina to inner-city Detroit--an increase from 429,000 five
years ago. The largest number are in California; 42% of the
students in the Los Angeles Unified School District, the state's
largest, are enrolled in year-round programs. The apparent success
of such schooling has inspired hundreds of districts across
the country to study the concept; if current trends continue,
National Association for Year-Round Education officials say,
the number will more than double by the end of the decade.
</p>
<p> "The traditional school calendar was set when children had to
help out in the fields and most mothers didn't work outside
the home," says Mooresville program supervisor Carol Carroll,
who has seen Park View grow from 202 children in 1990 to 1,101
children, representing 49% of the town's grade-school population.
"Families today have a completely different life-style. This
is a program that works for how we live today."
</p>
<p> It may also be the answer to the decades-old concern that American
students are being ill-prepared by their educational system
to compete with their counterparts overseas. A federal commission
fueled such fears when it reported in May that American students
spend less than half the time studying the core subjects of
math, reading, history and science that students in such countries
as Germany, France and Japan do. Education critics have long
called for extending the U.S. school year from its current 180
days to something closer to Japan's 240 days.
</p>
<p> A few schools have attempted to do just that. Beacon Day School,
for example, a private school in Oakland, California, operates
240 days a year, with vacations scheduled at parents' leisure.
More commonly, however, schools have simply reorganized the
traditional 180-day schedule. At Park View, classes run for
nine weeks, followed by a three-week break, a schedule known
as a 45/15 calendar. Other schools, such as those in the Socorro
Independent School District in El Paso County, Texas, use a
60/20 model: 60 days of school followed by 20 days of vacation.
</p>
<p> One major benefit of such schedules is to improve students'
retention rate. Teachers in traditional nine-month schools often
must spend three to six weeks in the fall reviewing material
learned the previous year. "The year-round program is particularly
good for at-risk students because they don't have that long
summer to forget what they struggled so hard to learn," says
Brenda Teeter, a Mooresville science teacher.
</p>
<p> Break time is not always vacation time. During the three- or
four-week period, teachers may use one week to help students
who have fallen behind, another week to give special attention
to gifted students. Schools may also offer enrichment classes
in such topics as photography or world cultures. "Even when
they're on intersession, kids come to the school recreation
room to play pool, Monopoly and Ping-Pong," says Eva Valencia,
a volunteer coordinator at a Socorro school. "This way the kids
can come to school instead of hanging out on the streets and
joining gangs."
</p>
<p> By the most objective measure, test scores, year-round education
seems to be working. Before switching to its new schedule, Socorro
schools had some of the lowest test scores in the county. Now
Socorro students outscore the state average on the Texas Assessment
of Academic Skills. One Socorro school, Campestre Elementary,
sits just 200 yards from the Rio Grande; two-thirds of its predominantly
Hispanic students have limited English proficiency. Yet 87%
of Campestre's third-, fourth- and fifth-graders passed the
state's achievement exam, compared with 67% before the school
started its year-round schedule four years ago.
</p>
<p> Year-round schools can also be a way to use facilities more
efficiently. Some overcrowded schools stagger students into
different tracks, ensuring that a fraction of the student body
will be away during every grading period. Socorro schools were
able to serve 2,000 more children during the 1993-94 academic
year because of its multitrack calendar, a great help in a district
that grows by 1,500 kids a year.
</p>
<p> For all the advantages, however, converting to year-round schooling
can be difficult and expensive. To endure the summer heat, many
schools must install air conditioning. Teachers' salaries may
go up, since they usually work more weeks, and there is limited
time off for administrators. Some schools, unable to afford
the extra expense, have returned to traditional terms.
</p>
<p> Parents can be difficult to convert as well. Many hold tight
to the tradition of long summer holidays, touting family outings
as valuable experiences that provide quality time with their
children. "The traditional school calendar is too deeply embedded
in me," says Debbie Lanier of Mooresville. "We live on a lake,
and we couldn't enjoy it in other months." But other parents
find the life-style change beneficial. Says Robin Andrews, a
landscape designer in Mooresville who has two children in the
year-round program: "We can take the kids on vacations that
are less crowded and less expensive because we don't go during
peak periods."
</p>
<p> Parents can also take comfort in the biggest surprise of all:
children who attend year-round schools actually seem to like
them. Melissa Hill, a fifth-grader at Socorro's O'Shea Keleher
School, had her initial doubts about year-round schooling. "But
now I like it a lot," she says. "When I used to wake up in the
morning, I felt like I wanted to crawl back in bed. I think
it encourages kids to go to school because you always know that
you're going to be on break soon." Mireya Reyes, a fifth-grader
at Campestre, doesn't miss the old summer vacation either. "In
one month we do everything we want," she says. "And then we
come back and like school better."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>