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Do Kids Need a Summer Vacation?Why schoolchildren get to take three months off.


As schools across the country clear out for summer, one can't help but wonder whether all that time out of the classroom is good for kids. In an "Explainer" last July, Juliet Lapidos discovered that the standard 180-day academic calendar is the result of century-old developmental theories, outdated medical concerns, and fiscal limitations. Revisit the article in this year's Summer Vacation issue.

Children playing in a Central Park fountain.

Most American school kids are about three weeks in to their three-month summer vacation. Yet working adults (the Explainer included) spend the better part of June, July, and August toiling away as usual. Why do kids enjoy such generous summer breaks?

Fiscal limitations, century-old developmental theories, and outdated medical concerns. The now-standard 180-day academic calendar with a long summer holiday didn't come about until the early 20th century. Previously, urban schools operated year-round with short breaks between quarters. In 1842, Detroit's academic year lasted approximately 260 days, New York's 245, and Chicago's 240. But since education wasn't mandatory in most states until the 1870s, attendance was low. Despite the official schedule, many kids ended up spending the same amount of time in school back then as they do now. Brooklyn school officials, for example, reported in 1850 that more than half their students showed up just six months a year.



Poor attendance got some people wondering if such a long academic calendar was worthwhile. Why keep schools open year-round if most kids don't even go? Reformers also warned that goody-goodies who did show up every day might burn out. Many physicians at the time felt that students were too frail, both in mind and body, for so many days at their desk. Too much education, they argued, could impair a child's health.

City school officials began listening to reformers around the turn of the century. Gradually, they shortened the school year by about 60 days and eliminated the summer quarter. Reformers could have instituted a long break in winter, or spring, but they picked summer for three main reasons. 1) Poorly ventilated school buildings were nearly unbearable during heat waves. 2) Community leaders fretted that hot, crowded environments facilitated the spread of disease. 3) Wealthy urbanites traditionally vacationed during the hottest months, and middle-class school administrators were following in their footsteps.

Meanwhile, the school districts outside cities had quite different academic calendars. In the 19th century, rural kids spent just five or six months in school—two to three months in summer and the same in winter—and the rest of the year laboring on farms. So while urban educators worried that children were overtaxed by their busy schedule, officials in rural areas thought their students were mentally undertaxed. By the early 20th century, public-school officials in many farm states had lengthened the academic year and introduced a summer break to bring agrarian districts into line with urban ones.

Physicians no longer believe that children are too feeble for year-round instruction, and most school buildings now have effective ventilation systems. So why don't we go back to having school in the summertime? For one thing, it's expensive to keep schools open, just like it was in the late 1800s. But some nonprofit organizations argue that the long breaks hinder the learning process. According to the Johns Hopkins Center for Summer Learning, kids score worse on standardized tests in early September than in late June. Plus, students in other industrialized countries have more instructional time. The Israeli academic year lasts 216 days, and kids in Japan plug away for a whopping 243 days per annum.

Explainer thanks Ken Gold of the College of Staten Island and Philo Hutcheson of Georgia State University.

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Juliet Lapidos is a Slate assistant editor.
Photograph of kids playing by Mario Tama/Getty Images.
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Comments from the Fray

Just because American adults only get 2 weeks vacation, unlike our European friends, doesn't mean we should move in that direction for kids! There is plenty of reason to think that free time is good for children (and adults) in terms of fostering creativity, pursuing interests that there isn't enough time for during the school year, and even—yes--doing absolutely nothing but running around outside. They are kids, after all. As for evidence showing that test scores are lower in September than in June, so what? There is a lot more to life than tests, and many (I'd say most) important life learning skills aren't covered on standardized tests anyway. Not to mention that most school children learn things for tests and promptly forget them anyway. Even the subjects I enjoyed, like math, are now long forgotten except for basic mental arithmetic.

Long live summer!

--azohri

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Just because kids can physically and mentally handle a longer school year, should we necessarily eliminate summer vacation or make it short? I think not. Summer has come to serve a purpose - younger kids spend time at camp, building non-academic skills and older kids/young adults do community service, internships and summer classes at high school or community college…The article mentions hindering the learning process, but it merely cites lower scores on standardized tests. Despite the prevalence of the SAT and similar tests, standardized tests have always been questionable as to their ability to measure intelligence and learning. Plus, kids in the US school system still grow up to some pretty amazing things and a variety of fields, even with competition from stringent school systems like Japan. So could summer vacation really be detrimental in the long run? I doubt it - summer camp, community service and internships have provided me with some of my best memories and most valuable experiences.

--labratcool

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