The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate committee: State should start and end school year later

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

A state Senate committee that has a majority of legislator­s and bureaucrat­s representi­ng business and tourism interests unanimousl­y approved recommenda­tions Thursday that include starting and ending the public school year later.

The Senate Study Committee on Evaluating the School Year Calendar of Georgia Public Schools foray into the issue has drawn opposition from some school districts and education organizati­ons who believe districts should decide

when the school year begins and ends, not the state. Committee members said Thursday they were aware of those concerns and recommende­d a range of dates — no earlier than seven to 10 days before Labor Day — for the start date. They recommende­d ending around June 1. They described the recommenda­tion as “guard rails for local control.”

Most of Georgia’s 181 school districts begin the school year in the first or second week of August. A few begin in late July. Many classes end the third week of May. Committee members said reasons for starting later include the cost to cool classrooms during the hottest days of summer, concerns about students riding hot buses, better aligning the schedule for students taking college courses and making it easier for students to work summer jobs. Sen. Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, who sponsored the resolution calling for the committee and led it, said 13 other states have similar laws.

The recommenda­tions are non-binding, but Gooch said he hopes it encourages school districts to get more parental input about the school calendar.

“It will help send a message back to the school boards ‘Hey, we want more involvemen­t in this decision process,’ “Gooch told reporters.

Senate staffers said the report would be released today.

Georgia School Boards Associatio­n policy and legislativ­e services director Angela Palm said while a discussion about better coordinati­ng the calendar for students in college dual-enrollment classes is a worthwhile, she believes start dates should be decided by local school districts. She thinks the committee is really an attempt to help businesses.

“They’re clearly trying to do this to create a summer work force,” Palm, who attended Thursday’s meeting.

During a committee meeting last week, businessme­n testified about losing summer workers to early school starts, depriving the students of money and on-the-job learning. And entertainm­ent and tourism businesses testified about losing customers.

Gooch also hopes the committee’s work will spark a conversati­on about pushing mandated tests to near the end of the school year to increase classroom instructio­n time.

Gooch attended the meeting with his 10-year-old son, Sawyer, a fourth-grader. Asked when he wanted the school year to begin, Sawyer replied, “After July.”

His birthday is in July, his dad explained.

 ?? ERIC STIRGUS / ESTIRGUS@AJC.COM ?? State senate committee members review a report with recommenda­tions on when public schools should start and end the school year. Committee chair Sen. Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, is second from the right. Gooch’s son, Sawyer, is to his left.
ERIC STIRGUS / ESTIRGUS@AJC.COM State senate committee members review a report with recommenda­tions on when public schools should start and end the school year. Committee chair Sen. Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, is second from the right. Gooch’s son, Sawyer, is to his left.

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