Los Angeles Times

Pushing for a later school start

A resolution that would shift the first day of classes notes complaints from parents — and issues caused by the summer heat.

- HOWARD BLUME howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblum­e Times staff writer Joy Resmovits contribute­d to this report.

Three Los Angeles school board members will begin a push next week to start the following school year after Labor Day.

The traditiona­l academic year began Tuesday, three weeks before Labor Day, which falls on the first Monday in September.

The resolution, to be introduced at next Tuesday’s meeting, is sponsored by board members George McKenna, Scott Schmerelso­n and Richard Vladovic.

If a fourth vote can be found on the seven-member board, next year’s start date could be approved by October.

The resolution cites complaints from parents — and problems caused by hot weather. The early calendar eliminates cooler classroom weeks in June, replacing them with the summer heat of August. That leads, the resolution says, to greater energy costs, more wear and tear on AC units, and the frequent need to keep students inside for physical education and sports.

There is, of course, another side to the story. Supporters of the early start say it benefits secondary students, who get their fall semester exams over with before they go on winter break.

Officials also have said that the early start allows more time for academic interventi­on between the fall and spring semesters.

The school calendar is a big deal for families and has long been a controvers­ial topic. Several decades ago, the L.A. Unified School District overcame opposi- tion to a year-round calendar, asserting that students would learn more without an extended summer break.

But the real motivating factor at the time was overcrowdi­ng. Schools that operated all year could accommodat­e about onethird more students. In that era, it was common for students to attend school on a staggered basis — four months on, two months off.

That approach resulted in 17 fewer days, instructio­nal time that was recovered by making each remaining school day longer.

Eventually, declining enrollment and the nation’s largest school constructi­on and modernizat­ion program allowed schools to return to a more traditiona­l calendar.

Then, joining a growing trend, the school system gravitated toward the early start.

Some parents in the Torrance Unified School District are fighting to get the early start. As of Wednesday afternoon, according to organizers, 808 people had signed a petition asking that district to make the school year begin before Labor Day.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS HEAD to Los Angeles High School on the first day of classes. The Los Angeles Unified School District began the academic year on Tuesday, three weeks before Labor Day.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times STUDENTS HEAD to Los Angeles High School on the first day of classes. The Los Angeles Unified School District began the academic year on Tuesday, three weeks before Labor Day.

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