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But the federal budget is hard-up, too. And while many educators and parents believe students would benefit from more quality learning time, the idea is not universally popular. Texas already forbids school from starting before the fourth Monday of August, a provision designed to save money on utility bills and increase business for tourist destinations and other summer attractions. "Ultimately the states, not the federal government, should have the final word on this and other public school decisions," said Lucy Nashed, a spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry. In Kansas, sporadic efforts by local districts to extend the school year at even a few schools have been met by parental resistance, said state education commissioner Diane DeBacker. "The community was just not ready for kids to be in school all summer long," DeBacker said. "Kids wanted to go swimming. Their families wanted to go on vacation." In some states, the school year already starts well before Labor Day and in others nearly stretches to the Fourth of July.
Parents are similarly divided Parent Irene Facciolo in Monpelier, Vt., said kids need the summer break and learn while they're away from school. "I really feel like they need the time to regenerate," she said. But Laura Spencer of Orlando, Fla., says she would rather have her 10-year-old daughter learning than hanging out. "Summer is a lost opportunity," said Spencer, who believes having kids out of school for three to four months makes an already flawed education system worse.
[Associated
Press;
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