If one course is beneficial to one group, yet detrimental to others, is there a justification for two separate courses?
I would propose that extending the school year is not specifically detrimental to the education of any group. I think we can both agree that three months of not performing a task will result in a degradation of skill, yes? Thus, three months outside of a learning environment will result in poorer basic skills (reading, writing, math, etc). The crux is that middle and upper class individuals are more likely to not actually be fully absent from a learning environment during the summer. Their parents are capable and engaged so as to provide such an environment. Thus, extending the school year would not take middle and upper class students out of an educational environment; rather, it would be switching one such environment for another.
It may be that the public education system would be inferior to the atmosphere provided by the parents, which is why I put forward the idea of a few summer months that focus on non-standard academic topics. These would continue to exercise the skills of the students so that they would not be lost, but it would also allow parents to pull their children out of school and perform their own education without worrying about their child missing critical information. Meanwhile, lower class individuals would have the opportunities that their parents are incapable or unwilling to provide, allowing for all ranks of society the basic level of opportunity to succeed.
To note, this would also work as a catchall for middle and upper class students whose parents do not provide an educational environment over the summer.
Also, is what you're proposing only to be put on Jr. High students, or from grades K-12?
With a few exceptions, K-12 (the exceptions being that I'd want to see studies measuring the ideal academic day-length for small children). The thing I didn't like about the Jr High system that I mentioned (which is the "KIPP" Academy and it, upon investigation, apparently runs at the grade school level as well) was that it seemed to be making up for previously neglected class time but it was doing so over an abbreviated period. Thus I am proposing a more intensive course of study than is presently enacted, but not so intensive as the Jr. High's that Gladwell used as a case study. Students would, generally, spend more time but that would be spread out over more years as well.
If so, I might have a hitch when it comes to the importance of the summer break to the high school senior heading to college. Those three months of getting ones affairs in order can mean the difference between making tuition or...well, not making tuition.
A worthy consideration, but one that, in terms of schooling hours, is a red herring. On one hand a student could forgo the experience and education necessary to succeed in order to get the opportunity to succeed, or the student could forgo the opportunity in favor of the experience and education. That is, by working at a job -- particularly the sort of job that a high-schooler can obtain -- the individual will be hampering their ability to succeed in college, but by not working they are hampering their ability to go to college. This is not ideal either way.
The solution, then, isn't to be found in adjusting hours for a student to work or go to school but rather in addressing the funding situation directly.
As I have argued before, high school graduates need legitimate non-University based education options. Universities are becoming more like trade schools in the current era because a great number of students do not want or need the type of education that they used to be designed for. However, a Bachelor's degree has been degraded to the point of what a HS diploma used to be, so many people need that just to get a decent job, even if that job has no use for what was learned in the course of obtaining that degree. I could go on, but the rundown is that if there were more educational options, the same number of college scholarships would have smaller applicant pools.
Trade schools, by teaching clearly and directly applicable skills, would be better suited to recupe their costs through student work projects, and thus should be less monetarily restricted than Universities.
However, the government would still need to fill in the gap (though I believe the above would lessen the gap). If an individual is qualified for an education, then keeping them from that education due to monetary considerations harms not only the individual but society as a whole. Perhaps programs could be implemented so that once the individual graduates they work for the government in underserved areas, in order to help recoup some costs.
Point being, skipping education in order to make money to afford education is not desirable on a personal or social level.
This might be a trifle on my part, but I don't understand why you put Engineering in your dream curriculum as opposed to something a bit more practical, such as computer science, etc.
Simple: it wasn't a dream curriculum. I had actually just meant it as an example, but I failed to label it at such. I mostly just went with what first came to mind.
Overall Thought, this again seems like a model that would only work for a student body that actually likes learning...fairly Utopian.
In what way?
Extending school hours does not rely on student willingness to learn. Indeed, in that regard, it is more dystopia than the current model (people aren't going to learn on their own, so more intervention is needed).
I suppose it is idealistic to assume that society would want to spend money on extending school hours, but generally increased funding seems to be a basic assumption of education reform.
Or were you referring to something else?
Thought, what is your thought on the possibility that these comparatively better performances are the result not of more instructional time (i.e., curriculum) but of more time spent in a more constructive / less jading atmosphere (i.e., as opposed to home life, friend life)?
Edit: Clarity.
Two things:
1) More time in school makes sense from a very basic level. A senior in high school knows more than a freshman in high school. Why? Is this because some innate ability? Or is it because they've spent more time in school, and so a wider range of information has been able to be covered. There may be points of diminishing returns, true, but it is fundamental that more time allows for more information.
2) Yes, more time spent in a constructive and less oppressive atmosphere is good and undoubtedly is an influence. This is a basic premise behind the argument for extending the school year in general.
Thus, the comparatively better performances are undoubtedly the result of less time in uneducational environments, but they are also undoubtedly the result of more time in educational environments as well. The two are not separateable in the example of the KIPP schools.