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- For More Information
Contact:
- Tina Bruno at
210-559-5277
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- Top
States Start School Later, Avoid Winter Break
Blues
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- Students in states that
follow a more traditional school calendar rank among the
best on college-entrance exams and standardized tests.
Schools in these top-rated states also tend to administer
end-of-semester exams after the Winter Break -- a fact
that stifles a major argument for early school start
dates.
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- Proponents of starting
school in early August often argue that students need to
take end-of-semester exams before the Winter Break so
they don't "lose" what they have learned before taking
time off. But key education data suggests states that
adhere to this philosophy are having little success in
making promised academic progress.
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- A late August or early
September school start date was observed in the majority
of schools
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in the top 10
states with students posting the highest average scores
on the American College Test (ACT) in 2003.
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in 8 of the top
10 states with the highest average 2003 Scholastic
Assessment Test (SAT) scores.
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in the top 10
states in the American Legislative Exchange Council's
"Report Card on American Education," which considers
standardized test scores, expenditures per pupil and
student-teacher ratio.
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in the top 10
states in Morgan Quitno Press' "State and City Rankings."
The annual rankings are based on 21 categories ranging
from school revenue per $1,000 personal income, per pupil
expenditures, class size, high school dropout rates and
percent of students proficient or better in reading,
writing and mathematics.
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- The majority of schools
in these states also administered end-of-semester exams
after the Winter Break. Most Texas schools begin classes
in mid-August and test students before the Winter Break.
Texas ranked near the bottom in all of these educational
indicators.
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- Backers of the
traditional school calendar -- one that begins classes
after or near Labor Day and that ends in late May or
early June -- contend that the shape of a school calendar
has no impact on academic performance. This data also
gives weight to a logical follow-up statement:
Traditional school calendars don't hinder academic
excellence.
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- Calendars do not teach
children -- teachers and parents do!
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