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Culture Focus: Going on Vacation

For many Americans, summertime is vacation time.  Part of the reason for this is because the traditional American school year includes a three-month break for the summer.  This makes it easier to take an extended trip of a week or two with the kids.  Additionally, the weather is warmer than other times of the year, making travel easier.

There are different ways to take a vacation:

  • Road trip.  The whole vacation is a road trip – for example, drive around Lake Michigan or Lake Superior.
  • Hotel / resort.  Travel to a destination – such as a hotel or resort – and then relax at that destination for several days.
  • Visiting family.  Take the opportunity to visit the grandparents or other relatives, especially if Grandma and Grandpa live out-of-state.
  • “RVing.”  RVing means “living on the road in an RV,” or recreational vehicle (= camping car).
  • Camping.  Spend your vacation in the great outdoors, making your vacation a camping or fishing trip.
  • Rent a vacation home.  Rent a vacation home for a week or so and unwind.
  • Educational trip.  Combine vacation with education, and take the children to visit famous historical sites, such as Civil War battlefields or the numerous historical attractions around the Washington, D.C. area.
  • Amusement park.  Take a trip to Disneyland (in California) or Disneyworld (in Florida).
  • College Visits.  If you have teenagers who are thinking about going to college, include a visit to check out several college campuses as part of your summer vacation.
  • Staycation.  If you don’t have the money to travel, or you don’t want the hassle of traveling, take a “staycation” (= stay vacation) and relax at home.

Regardless of your preference, a vacation is a great time to step aside from the daily grind of work or your normal routine, and “recharge your batteries.”  In this day and age of instant, constant communication (email, internet, cell phones, etc.), it’s perhaps more important than ever to take some sort of break – whether physical (going away somewhere) or mental (“unplugging” from electronics) – and spend some time in self-renewal.  So, let your friends and colleagues know that you’re going on vacation, and you’ll be unavailable for several days.  Hang out a virtual sign, as it’s sometimes put in the vernacular:

Gone Fishing!

Gone fishing ~

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Education Focus: School’s Out!

School's out, school's out!

With the start of June, many students are eagerly anticipating their summer break, if it hasn’t already started!  Most elementary, middle, and high schools generally have their last day of school sometime around the end of May or the beginning of June.  For school districts in northern states, a school year might be extended or not, depending on whether any “snow days” were used in the course of the academic year.  Some districts do not include any snow days in their calendar, so if they have to cancel any school days because of too much snow, they make up for it by extending the end of the school year by an equal number of days.  Other districts include extra snow days in their calendar in advance, and any unused snow days convert to summer vacation.

Sometime during the final days of the school year, some schools might have a school / class picnic or other celebration before the students are dismissed for the summer.  Before the final day of class, textbooks have to be returned, desks and lockers have to be cleaned out, and art projects have to be taken home.  It used to be that on the very last day of the school year, students would attend school to pick up their report card and find out if they would be promoted to the next grade for the fall.  They would also say goodbye to their classmates and teachers.  Now, most schools mail out the report cards, so there is not much to do on the final day except take care of any loose ends – make sure that locker is cleaned out, or finally pay the fine on that overdue library book – and say goodbye.  Both students and teachers look forward to several weeks of freedom from the normal grind of school, until classes start up again in late August or early September.

There are two short rhymes about the end of the school year:

School’s out, school’s out – teacher let the monkeys out!

and

No more pencils
No more books
No more teacher’s dirty looks!

(“dirty looks” is an expression that describes the disapproving way a parent or a teacher might look at a child who misbehaves.)

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