Wednesday, June 17, 2009

We Need Ahnold to the Rescue!

An Associated Press article with a Chino, California, dateline on Yahoo! News caught my attention with the headline, “Some Calif. kids may get 34 extra school days.” The problem stems from the occasional trimming of school days to allow for teacher preparation.

Here is the gist of the article:

State law requires that shortened days must be at least 180 minutes in length. According to an internal audit, 34 days at two elementary schools in Chino did not meet that standard, having been trimmed to 170 or 175 minutes. Consequently, those days do not count at all toward the minimum number of days required to equal a school year. A spokesperson for State Department of Higher Education said the legislature made the requirements stringent on purpose to dissuade school districts from committing willy-nilly day shaving.

Leave it to the bureaucrats to try to cover their tracks. A district associate superintendent who is already scheduled to retire this year has taken blame. The district’s PR machine is trumpeting benefits of the mandatory summer school session that will “feature extra arts, music and science and give students a head start on next year’s curriculum.”

What about the enrichment those kids will lose by not attending the summer camps for which their parents booked them? What about the vacation reservations made by families that will now have to be foregone? What about the teachers who had summer employment lined up? What about a lot of stuff that is taking a backseat to bureaucratic stupidity and the so-called tough stance of the legislature?

Assume a 10 minute shave for each of the 34 days in question. That’s 340 minutes. A regular day for elementary students is, what, 360 minutes, including lunch and recesses. So, all of this havoc and deprivation of childhood is, in essence, all about a tad less than one regular school day.

Give me a break. I think the Kindergarten Cop, AKA The Governator, needs to get involved here. Come on, Ahnold, make these yahoos do the right thing, and give these kids their summer vacation back.

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