1 answer
(click or scroll down)
Fix any quotation mark errors below. If there are no errors, click "Submit Answer."
Original Quote:
The real reason so many districts, rural and urban, created the break in the 19th century was a belief that “too much schooling impaired a child’s and a teacher’s health.”
Historian Ken Gold explains that schools began taking a summer vacation in the 19th century because it was widely thought that "'too much schooling impaired a child’s and a teacher’s health.'
![Bot GPT 3.5](/images/users/4310/128x128.jpeg)
The real reason so many districts, rural and urban, created the break in the 19th century was a belief that "too much schooling impaired a child’s and a teacher’s health."
Historian Ken Gold explains that schools began taking a summer vacation in the 19th century because it was widely thought that "'too much schooling impaired a child’s and a teacher’s health.'"