Not A Freak--
A couple of points...
At least one local district (I forget which) was playing with the idea of going to a 4-day week with longer days in order to cut costs, but to do that they would have to get the +approval of the appropriate legislative boards or whatever. That's the whole reason I brought up the contact hours bit.
I agree, it makes a whole lot of sense to split the year with the Christmas holiday (after all, that's what we do...) but it doesn't match the somewhat pathalogical requirement for four quarters in the academic year. At my school, we do it in a somewhat more logical fashion: the fall semester this year was 17 weeks, the spring semester is 15 weeks, and we don't have to count class days...that State mandate doesn't apply to Universities. Anyway, if you're willing to be a little bit flexible with the class scheduling, my schedule offers 83 days before Christmas and 97 days after. So if you make each quarter run for 45 days, the second quarter ends after the first week back from break. Even better would be to make the quarters run 40, 43, 50, and 47 days, then there is a break right at the Christmas holiday, and it would be possible to put a break in late March, which would make more sense than waiting until the Easter holiday (our "Spring" break was last week...). The point is, it isn't necessary to start early in order to get the semester over in time for Christmas. It IS necessary to make the appropriate adjustments in the class plan to make it work.
As for the President's day and Martin Luther King day holidays...I didn't include them because they aren't necessary. Never in my academic career did I ever get the day off for Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Groundhog Day, Valentine's Day, President's Day, St. Patrick's Day, or any other national or local holiday. I never understood why we got the day off for Martin Luther King Jr's birthday, which was NOT a Federal holiday, but not for George Washington or Abraham Lincoln, whose birthdays WERE Federal holidays. Once King got his holiday, I felt vindicated when I got to college and we didn't take off either of those days. If you're not going to take the one, then why take the other? And given that one happens in January, the other in February, and odds are the weather will be miserable for both, I'd rather be in school so that I can have more time off in the summer!
--Dave Althoff, Jr.