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The assumption that students should only work 9 months of the year and have a 3 month vacation is a Western construct that has nothing to do with the current academic or vocational demands of the society.  It is a left-over of a time when students were needed to do agricultural labor, and later, to accompany their families on "retreats" to get out of the steaming polluted cities.  "Year-round" schools are a better solution on paper, but are frought with scheduling problems;  i.e. if your two weeks off are during football season and you are a player?  What about your siblings not having the same vacation?  So, the most practical solution is to shorten vacations for everyone, and even add online learning components to students "courseloads" which they could complete during the vacation. Sounds harsh, but in a global economy, it may become necessary to remain competitive.

Posted 3 months ago
matto was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

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Undertaker (thinks this answer is Not Helpful)

In our school district, the teachers are not real teachers but slave drivers with given school work, my neice is age 8 and has been doing so much home work since 1st grade that it's unbelievable this was brought up at pta meeting but teachers and administrators do not want to anything , and yes my sister does find plenty of activitys with going to bible school and she goes to the local library for reading activitys as well the main thing for 3 months off of school is, higher teenage pregnanys take place higher teens committ crimes , so not all students should have to suffer , than again not all teens all are bad teens , i am saying a small percentage our schools have fxcked up air conditioning systems what about the days that they heat is extreme some students put more into school work and activitys in school than others do

 
matto

these have been some of the arguments for more of a vocational track for some students, and more of an academic one for others (i.e. college prep). this is what you see in most european countries. the U.S. has never gone in that direction mostly because it seems to feel undemocratic to sort students that way (at an early age...especially).

 
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