- Backlash grows as some schools
begin next week
August 03, 2000
By Anne Marie Chaker
The Wall Street Journal
For more families with kids in school, August is the new September.
In a shift that is confounding summer vacation plans and sparking outcries
from both parents and the tourism industry, school districts are increasingly
pushing the academic year into the lazy days of August -- with some
districts starting classes as early as next Monday.
In certain parts of the country, such as the South and parts of the
Midwest, many public schools have been starting before Labor Day for
some time. But even in those areas, many are seeing the start date increasingly
moved up.
This year, the two biggest school districts in Florida are starting
school at record-early dates. Most of the schools in both Broward County
and Miami-Dade County public school districts -- together, about 600
schools -- are starting next week, Aug. 8.
In Texas, where districts must get permission from the state to start
classes before the week on which Aug. 21 falls, over 700 districts have
received waivers for school to start in early to mid-August this year.
That's compared with over 100 districts that received permission last
year.
And classes in South Carolina have been progressively starting earlier
over the past decade. This year, the vast majority of the state's 85
districts are starting by Aug. 15. That is compared with only two districts
that started by then 10 years earlier.
In all, about three-fourths of the nation's public schools now start
before Sept. 1. That's up from about 50 percent that started that early
in the late 1980s, according to a survey by Market Data Retrieval, an
education research firm.
The trend is sparking a backlash, as parents complain that August start
dates conflict with such things as family reunions and camp schedules
and rob children of the chance to enjoy the last lazy days of summer.
Parent groups with names like "Georgians Need Summers," along
with tourism interests who say the trend cuts into end-of-summer travel
business, have been lobbying for legislation limiting how early the
school year can start. In Minnesota, a bill to require schools to start
after Labor Day was signed into law last month and will take effect
next school year.
Educators say part of what is driving the earlier dates is the growing
pressure that comes with state standardized tests. This year in South
Carolina, for instance, the Palmetto Achievement Challenge Test will
be administered in May to grades three through eight; by starting in
mid-August, students and teachers gain three weeks of study that they
wouldn't get by starting after Labor Day.
The stakes are high: Under President Bush's No Child Left Behind law,
schools could face a range of possible sanctions, including school restructuring
and faculty job loss, if students don't meet test thresholds. "Performance
on these tests literally have people losing jobs, and teachers are using
these scores when they decide to hold kids back," says Jim Foster,
spokesman for the South Carolina Department of Education in Columbia,
S.C.
While state-mandated instructional days have generally stayed stable
at around 180 days, school officials note that earlier starts also shift
the academic calendar so that the fall semester ends at winter break.
Thus students are able to take midterm exams before the holidays while
the material is still fresh, and don't have to cram for exams that would
otherwise be given the week they get back.
Nevertheless, parents are irked. Alix Wolf, a mother of four children
who attend public schools in Broward County, Fla., says the fact that
school now starts Monday has made it impossible to take her children
to a mid-August family reunion, as well as a wedding this weekend. On
top of that, she has pulled her kids out a week early from day camp.
"When I paid for it, I didn't realize they'd come up against each
other so closely," she says.
Ms. Wolf is planning to join other parents in forming a group that would
petition legislators to pass a law that would require a later start
date. Her group would join a number of other efforts that have been
drawing attention to the issue of early school starts, including Georgians
Need Summers, Save South Carolina Summers, and a North Carolina parent
group called Save Our Summers. The latter was instrumental in getting
a law passed in 2004 that says North Carolina schools generally can't
start any earlier than Aug. 25.
One group, Texans for a Traditional School Year, says it has received
funding from a powerful ally: the tourism industry. So far this year
the group has received nearly $25,000, much of it from businesses ranging
from hotels and restaurants to the "T-shirt people," says
Tina Bruno, a parent of three in San Antonio and founder of the group,
which supported passage of the 2001 law that required districts to ask
state permission to start early.
A 2004 study by Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn says that
while the overall number of school days has remained stable over the
past 50 years, the academic year has gradually stretched out with such
things as more and longer holiday breaks and extra teacher-training
days. The study says the economic effects of shorter summer breaks can
be seen in reduced tourist activity and higher energy bills for air
conditioning the school buildings. A summer break that is shortened
by two weeks costs tourism businesses in the state an estimated $392
million, the study calculated.
In South Carolina, one beach-house and condominium-rental agency says
that its August business from South Carolina tourists is half what it
is in July. "Whatever we're doing in August, we'd probably double
that if schools in South Carolina had a uniform start date" in
September, says Rod Swaim, a partner in Dunes Realty Inc., Garden City
Beach, S.C.
In Michigan, Dan Musser, president of the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island,
testified before a state legislative hearing that over the past 15 years
"we have seen a decrease of a little over 25 percent in revenues
from the time period of Aug. 18 through Aug. 31."
Among other state laws spurred by tourism-industry and parent lobbying:
Last year, North Carolina passed a bill that requires public schools
to open no sooner than Aug. 25 and close no later than June 10, with
few exceptions. In Michigan, legislation requiring school to start after
Labor Day is pending in the state Senate. And these states are joining
a handful of others, such as Virginia and Wisconsin, which mandate September
start dates.
Some school officials say decisions that affect education shouldn't
stem from business interests. Minnesota state Rep. Mark Buesgens, chairman
of the House educational-policy committee who had opposed the Minnesota
law, points out that schools could have a host of reasons for wanting
flexibility in their schedules.
Backlash
Some states have enacted laws to
curb early school starts, in response to parent and tourism-industry
concerns:
- North Carolina: 2004 law says
schools generally can't start earlier than Aug. 25.
- Minnesota: Starting next year,
schools can't start before Labor Day.
- Virginia: Law requires classes
to start after Labor Day.
- Wisconsin: Law requires school
to start after Sept. 1.
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