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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>
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