Friday, May 05, 2006

Summer Daze

Ok, I have to admit that I've had a bit of a case of spring fever lately. The weather's gotten warmer and suddenly all I really want to think about is how soon my pool will open, when I can get in that first weekend trip to the beach, and how long I'll have to spend in the sun to get rid of the ghastly pasty white color now covering my arms and legs. I love summer, even hot, sticky, humid D.C. summers.

But the reality is that, for education policy wonks, summer should actually be a pretty grim time. During the summer months, we see a significant widening in achievement gaps between poor and affluent children. That's largely because, while summers for middle-class kids mean organized sports, day- and sleep-away camps, horizon-widening family vacations, parentally-encouraged reading for fun, and lots of other brain-stimulating and school-reinforcing activities, for lower-income kids, like many of those in my neighborhood, summer mostly means boredom, opportunities to get in trouble, and losing a lot of educational ground. Another casualty of the outdated agricultural model of public schooling.

Former Clinton economic wonk Gene Sperling writes about this in his latest column, as well as two recent policy proposals--one from Princeton economists Alan Krueger and Molly Fifer for Brookings' Hamilton Project, the other from New Vision Institute smarties Scott Winship, Matissa Hollister, Joel Horwich, Pat Sharkey, and Christopher Wimer, who are working with the Center for American Progress--that would establish government-funded summer opportunity scholarships to give disadvantaged youngsters access to the same educational opportunities middle-class families take for granted during the summer. (It's also worth noting that a number of high-performing charter schools already have created some type of summer institutes, extended school years, or summer enrichment connections to help their disadvantaged students get up to speed and stay there.)

Stay tuned for this topic--along with the weather--to heat up in the coming months.

Thanks to reader CC for the tip on this article.

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