











|
Posted
May 4, 2003

| Those
Broken Rule Days |
| The Observer was the target of a mass-mailing campaign this
week. A series of letters to the editor, to be precise, that
all shared similar wording and phrases and were all about
the same subject. But it was the source of the letters that
caught my attention. |
| The letters, three of them, arrived in today's mail, each
with a stamp from a postage meter and each on the official
stationary of Fairfax County Public Schools. And each one
had, well, youthful looking writing on the outside addressing
the envelope to the editor. |
| "I think students should not be assigned work over their
summer vacation," the first one began. "One reason why I believe
this is because kids need sleep. Also we have to have some
fun like going to the beach." Another wrote: "This issue is
important to me because I want to have fun in my summer vacation." |
| I thought the third letter put it most succinctly: "Students
may want to visit family or just sit back and chill and relax.
They don't want to worry about school or having to turn in
work. Giving homework over the summer is just like us having
spring break." |
| I remember leaving for summer vacation with a pile of schoolbooks
in the car. Hey, 15 years after graduating college I'm still
working on the reading list the dean sent me off with. |
| Sadly, the letters came from a school that is not in our
area, so I didn't publish them. But kudos for these students.
Kids, I don't think you should have homework over the summer,
either. But I do think you should read a few books over your
break. Chill all you want, but don't forget to exercise your
minds. |
Copyright © 2003 The Herndon
Publishing Company
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