I don't recall when school started when I was an elementary, junior high or high school student, but I know it was not as early as it starts around here today, which is the first week in August.
We might have started the week before Labor Day, or maybe the day after Labor Day, but I believe it was right around that. I always thought of the school year running from Labor Day to Memorial Day, with three months off in the summer. Breaks during the year consisted of a couple of days at Thanksgiving, two weeks at Christmas and a week in the spring. Maybe a day or two at Easter.
As I recall, even spring break was not a thing until I was in high school.
When my children were in school, things got started more around mid-August. When my last two were still in school, after my oldest had graduated, the school district proposed a more balanced calendar, with school starting earlier, maybe even late July, with more breaks during the year.
I joined with other parents in vigorously opposing it, and at the time, we prevailed. Over time, however, those who favor an earlier start date have gotten their way.
I always liked summers with my kids, and two months just seemed like such a short time.
But today, school starts the first week of August. Summer break is two months instead of three. There are all kinds of breaks, including a weeklong fall break and a full week at Thanksgiving, and other days here and there. I suppose parents have become accustomed to this type of calendar and schedule.
With so many families having both parents working, those breaks during the year must present challenges. Being long removed from it, although I would still favor a three-month summer break, I don't get worked up over it anymore. (But if I had a vote, it would be for a later start date.)
My grandchildren who are in school, in Alabama and Georgia, respectively, all started back this week as evidenced by the adorable pictures below. It seems the earlier start date is a thing around the South.
Summer is an interesting season in that even other institutions seem to take breaks. (Although not in banking, the industry I have worked in for more than a quarter-century.) Our church's regular pastors take a rest from the pulpit for a couple of months. We go to two services instead of three because more people seem to be traveling, not in town for church.
People will say, "how is your summer going?" I don't recall being asked that about fall, winter or spring.
There is some assumption, even if I don't have children at home and I'm not going by a school calendar, I am enjoying some kind of relaxed schedule.
When I think back on this summer, I will, of course, think of my knee replacement surgery, which was seven weeks ago now. Recovery and rehabilitation continue, and I am doing well.
But I wouldn't call it relaxing.
7 comments:
If I remember correctly, Bob, we went back to school the first week in September in elementary school. I don't remember the building having AC at that point.
My youngest grandson started back this past Thursday. I think the older ones will next week. Who knows about the one in graduate school.
For all my life, school has always started on the last full week of August. It is enshrined in our state laws. I think it was done so to preserve our State Fair which is always the week before school starts to allow everyone was last hurrah before school. We always have enjoyed being relatively last in the nation for starting school, at least until spring when others have gotten out and we are still plugging away for a couple extra weeks.
We too started school in September, after Labor day. School ended just prior to Memorial Day. My grands still have 2 more weeks of summer though. Even the youngest is headed for preschool and is quite thrilled.
School started the first of September. Sometimes before or after Labor Day. In NC it had a lot to do with flue cured tobacco which was mostly done by this point in the season. Where I lived, there was no tobacco, but the surrounding counties had a lot grown. We also didn't have AC in schools (how did we manage?)
We started around August 20th every year if I recall. My wife's niece and nephew up north still start the day after Labor Day.
I don't see how people are able to get childcare for all the last-minute cancellations because "it might snow" or "there is a chance of storms." There have been several days one of us have had to take a vacation day from work to stay home with them.
Glad you're doing ok with your rehabilitation. (My wife has given up on rehabilitating me.)
I have been somewhat removed from the public school schedule for many, many years, but I noticed in our little town in Indiana, when driving by one school, that "Meet Your Teacher" day was on August 4th, and the first day of school was August 6th. That sounds crazy early to me, but I will admit when we lived in town, I looked forward to the quieter days in the neighborhood - mostly the rowdy teens in the pool all day two houses down. Happy kid noises are nice, rowdy teen noise - not so much.
Glad your knee is rehabilitating. I know (not first hand, but watching Hub) that healing and exercising healing a new knee can be a slog. But everyone I know who's had it done is happy they did it.
The pictures of your grands heading to school are truly adorable.
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