Fall 2015 Intern
At some point, someone told me the
schedule for summer vacation in schools was because the farmers had needed
their kids home to help with planting and harvesting crops. It wasn’t until I
was older that the northern Minnesota tradition of garden planting over
Memorial Day weekend began to poke little seed-sized holes in that “fact.” We planted
in the spring and harvested in the fall. A lot of things have changed since the
1800s, but I don’t think basic rules of farming have changed that much.
As Kenneth Gold, associate professor and interim dean of
the School of Education at CUNY’s College of Staten Island, explains in his
book School’s In: Summer Education and
American Public Schools 1840–2000, the agrarian
school calendar
that was in use in rural America had short summer and winter terms, when the farmwork
was comparatively light. In contrast, the schools in urban areas were open
essentially all year. In 1842, schools in New York City were open 248 days per
year, compared to today’s 180 days.
It will come as no
surprise to anyone living in temperate or tropical zones that summers can be
hot. Cities, thanks to the heat island effect, tend to be warmer
than nearby rural areas, and there was no air conditioning to keep buildings
cool in the 1800s. With tall buildings blocking breezes and insects and horses all
around, summers in cities could be smelly and miserable.
They were the perfect time for the upper and middle classes to leave, creating
an early version of summer vacations.
According to Gold,
the push for a standard school year came from the school
reformers of the 19th century. To
ensure equal schooling, reformers wanted all schools in the country to run on
the same schedule, so either the agrarian calendar or the urban calendar would
have to change. Year-round schooling was not an option, as doctors were
concerned that taxing young minds was unhealthy and could lead to nervous
disorders.
Taking summers off so
students can help on the farm seems like a perfectly reasonable explanation for
those three free months most students now experience, but once you take a
second look, questions start to arise. A variety of conditions, including the
combination of school reform and urbanization, led to summer break and summer
vacations, but working on the farm just wasn’t one of them.
Did You Know?
Amariah Brigham, a nineteenth-century
psychiatrist, recommended fewer hours of school because too much “cultivation
of the mind” led to “insanity and nervous affections”
among students.
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