Introduction - Two proposals
regarding the four-day school week in Colorado
In 2024 we have a
new understanding of the impact of the four-day school week on our students.
(Page two: Three recent reports indicate the four-day week has a negative impact
on student outcomes.) The
legislature and the Colorado Department of Education must take note. In light
of what we have learned, we need to update and perhaps significantly change
policies that have allowed this unusual school calendar to grow unchecked for
decades.
Another View #278
and #279 offers two proposals, each motivated by what we know today that we did
not know several years ago. In 2018, one can argue, District 27J and Pueblo 60 had
insufficient evidence to believe the four-day week might have a detrimental effect
on their students. (See box, below*.) We cannot say that today.
This chart (the numbers are rounded) shows how current state policy has
enabled the persistent growth of this trend in Colorado. Across the country, after
Missouri, we have the second highest number of districts operating
primarily on a four-day week. Triple the number since 1994. Forty more since
2014.
1980-1992 data from CDE’s “The Four-Day School Week
Information Manual,” (Revised July 2019) http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdeedserv/fourdayschoolweekmanual. 1994-2024
data from CDE[i]
and Keystone reports.
My first proposal (AV #278) addresses a little-noted result of our four-day week
schedule. It means that students in most Colorado districts attend school fewer
than 150 days. My research finds, on average, our larger districts meet with
students 172 days; our four-day districts see their students only 147 days. Does
each offer the same quality of education? Is this equitable? Who can say we are
not shortchanging students in our four-day week districts?
And when we compare
147 days to the 180-day schedule in most states….
My second proposal (AV
#279) examines the current policy when districts seek approval to remain on the
four-day week. I suggest we connect this process to state accountability and
the annual review of district performance. At present CDE’s Office of Field
Services raises no objections when a district asks to stay on the shorter
week/year, even when CDE’s Accountability Office has placed the same district
on Performance Watch. In 2024 we realize there can be a correlation
between lower student achievement and/or growth and the four-day school week. I
propose CDE’s two offices work together to provide a new level of accountability
when districts on Performance Watch seek to stay on the shorter
week/year.
Three recent reports indicate the four-day week has a negative impact on student outcomes (Bold
mine)
(August 2024) - “Doing Less with Less: How a four-day
school week affects student learning and the teacher workforce,” Keystone Policy Center, by Gottlieb,
Lagana, and Schoales. https://www.keystone.org/doing-less-with-less-how-a-four-day-school-week-affects-student-learning-and-the-teacher-workforce/
On student
achievement and growth:
Page 8 – Colorado data
“While
proficiency is strongly correlated with demographics, student growth is less
so. When looking at student growth data and comparing four- and five-day districts
the evidence suggests that students in five-day districts are making more
progress towards the standards than those in four-day districts, though
neither group is making sufficient progress to reach mastery. Five-day
districts have significantly higher Median Growth Percentiles than four-day
districts, a trend that was similar in 2022 and in 2019 was true for math and
to a smaller degree in ELA.”
Page
19 - Policy implications and recommendations
“One
of Colorado’s overarching policy goals in public education is to prepare
students for life after high school, be that higher education, vocational
training, or employment. But, as the data and perspectives presented in this
report show, the trend toward four-day school weeks
in Colorado does not provide a net benefit to the state’s public school
students….”
**
(2021)
RAND – “Does Four Equal Five?
Implementation and Outcomes of the
Four-Day School Week,” https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA373-1.html - Oct. 2021
(2023) - This opinion piece was
written by several of those who wrote the RAND report, above. It originally
appeared in The74 on April 4, 2023. “The Four Day School
Week: Are the Pros Worth the Cons?” by Christopher Joseph Doss, Andrea Phillips, and M. Rebecca Kilburn. https://www.rand.org/pubs/commentary/2023/04/the-four-day-school-week-are-the-pros-worth-the-cons.html
“… there is increasing evidence that, by and large, a
four-day school week causes student achievement to suffer. To study the
policy's effects, we looked at a variety of outcomes in six states—Colorado, Idaho, Missouri, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, and South Dakota—…. We compared achievement in English and
math in grades 3 through 8 in schools that adopted the four-day school week
against that of their five-day-a-week peers. We found that students in
four-day school week districts fell behind a little every year. Though
these changes were small, they accumulated. We estimate that after eight
years, the damage to student achievement will about equal that caused,
according to some estimates, by the pandemic. The potential
long-term learning deficit in student achievement from the four-day school week
is, our findings suggest, not trivial.
**
(2023) “A Multi-State, Student-Level Analysis of the Effects of the
Four-Day School Week on Student Achievement and Growth,” by Emily Morton,
Paul Thompson,
and Megan Kuhfeld, EdWorking Papers,
Annenberg Institute/Brown University. https://edworkingpapers.com/ai22-630
“… We
estimate significant negative effects of the schedule on spring reading
achievement (-0.07 SD) and fall-to-spring achievement
gains in math and reading (-0.06 SD in both). The negative effects of the
schedule are disproportionately larger in non-rural schools than rural schools
and for female students, and they may grow over time. Policymakers and
practitioners will need to weigh the policy’s demonstrated negative average
effects on achievement in their decisions regarding how and if to implement
a four-day week.”
**
If the four-day school week won’t change in many communities, let’s ask about the shorter school year – offering only 147 days of school. Is this the best we can do?
Proposal: Ensure all Colorado schools offer at least 160 days of school. No waivers for anything less.
What we have learned in 2024 about the
impact of the four-day school week on student outcomes might keep more Colorado
districts from adopting this structure. But in communities where it has become
a way of life, the latest research will not be enough to persuade them to
return to five days.
I
suggest we reframe the question for the 120-plus Colorado districts on a
four-day week schedule. It is not: Does the four-day school week work well
in your community? Most would answer yes. For many, it is all they have
known. We understand several reasons
for this choice: the hour-long bus rides each way, teacher retention and
recruitment, budget shortfalls. We get it.
Here is
a more useful question for these districts: Does the 147-day schedule
provide your students “a high-quality education”[ii]?
And here is a question for all of us in Colorado: Is this the best we
can do?
Student contact days
Academy 20 - 177
Huerfano Re-1 – 142
Aguilar - 141
|
Without a waiver, state law says that
Colorado districts must offer a minimum 160 days of school. (Until 1985
Colorado required 180 days of school [iii].) Addendum
A reveals how our current school year compares to the rest of the country.
Most states have 180 days of school.
My study of the
annual calendar from 40 Colorado districts on a four-day week shows that, on average,
they have 146.5 “student contact days” a year (Addendum B). In contrast,
our ten largest districts average 172.3 days of school (Addendum C). A
difference of almost 26 days. That old, loaded term, “separate but equal,”
comes to mind. Not equal. Not at all.
A difference of 33 days, when compared
to the annual calendar in over 30 states. How is this OK?
We overlook these differences when we focus
solely on the four-day SCHOOL WEEK.
I believe we can approve of the four-day
school week – provided we understand that students need to be in school, to
have “student contact days,” many more days than is currently the case.
My modest proposal says 160 days. Maybe add a 5th day every
third week. Maybe extend the school year well into June. Or a little of both.
However it is done, I propose we find a way to expect schools to be
in session at least 160 days a year. No waivers for anything less.
(Please know I take no satsfaction in asking for so little. Nevertheless, it would be a step forward.)
The debate in Idaho
This proposal comes from seeing how Idaho,
another state with many four-day school districts, is discussing and
debating the issue. Kevin Richert, senior reporter for Idaho Education News,
is digging
into the topic there. His overview sounded much like our story in Colorado:
For state leaders, the four-day issue poses
a political and policy problem.
The four-day schedule is so widely
supported, and so woven into the fabric of dozens of communities, that it is as
hard to unwind at the state level as it is at local level. In a state where
political leaders routinely espouse local control, second-guessing school
schedules is even more politically dicey.[iv]
Richert quoted from an opinion piece “lambasting
the national four-day school trend,” written by Paul T. Hill and Gloria Heyward
of the Center for Reinventing Public Education back in 2017.
If the four-day schedule [Richert wrote] is
a contagion, as Hill and Heyward suggest, it is a virulent one…. In Butte
County the four-day schedule has been in place for more than two decades … “There
would be a rebellion if we were to return to a five-day week,” Butte County
School District trustee Karen Pyron warned a House committee hearing in
February.
Sound familiar? But with evidence mounting that
this structure is not serving students well, what do we do?
“… parents
mention that they appreciate the additional family time and perceive other
benefits of the schedule for their children, and they overwhelmingly indicate
that they would choose to keep a four-day schedule over switching back to a
five-day schedule.” [v]
|
Paying attention to the SCHOOL YEAR
It
is impressive to see Idaho’s state leaders tackle such an essential feature
of its education landscape.
Idaho’s Gov. Brad Little and
State Superintendent Debbie Critchfield have made it clear they oppose the
four-day school week. Last winter the Governor and legislators proposed a bill
“that appeared to suggest school would forfeit their share of facilities money
if they chose to adopt a four-day calendar.” Supporters of the four-day week rallied
against it.
Here
Richert’s article invites us to consider a possible third way. Idaho looks at the
SCHOOL YEAR.
Little
and lawmakers [passed a bill] that would
allow four-day schools to qualify for facilities funding, provided they meet
state requirements for classroom hours or instructional days.
The upshot: Some four-day schools
might need to add another week or more to their calendar next
year, in order to reach the state’s 152-day instruction requirement. But
the law doesn’t phase out existing four-day schools — or forbid new ones. (Bold mine)
Does “equal time” in
school lead to an equally strong education?
Some will point out that, for Colorado districts
to receive a waiver when offering fewer than 160 days of school, they must show
the state Department of Education that their schedule meets the minimum number
of “classroom hours” (Addendum D). They achieve this by having
eight-hour school days, often running from 8 am to 4 pm. But the argument—if we
offer “equal time in school” students will receive the same quality of
education—is not convincing. (See Addendum E).
If we debate
the merits of the shorter week, per se, I doubt much will change. I see more
promise in asking if the shorter school year serves our students well. Let’s
face up to how the four-day school week plays out in our state: 120
districts offer roughly 26 fewer days of instruction than is the norm for
most Colorado students. How is this fair? We must do better than this.
My
modest proposal does not challenge the four-day SCHOOL WEEK. It would simply ensure
that every school offers at least 160 days of instruction.
**
Addendum A – Across the nation, how many days in the
school year? A comparison.
State*
|
# of days
|
|
|
|
|
**Kansas -
Gr. K-11 – 186/ Gr. 12 – 181
|
|
In a rating
of “the best public education systems” in the U.S., 10 of the top 13 states had 180 days of school.
https://districtadministration.com/which-states-boast-the-best-public-school-systems-wallethub-reports/
|
Illinois
|
185
|
|
North
Carolina
|
185
|
|
Alabama
|
180
|
|
Alaska
|
180
|
|
|
#1
Massachusetts
|
|
Arizona
|
180
|
|
|
#2
Connecticut
|
|
California
|
180
|
|
|
#3
New Jersey
|
|
Connecticut
|
180
|
|
|
#5
Virginia
|
|
District
of Columbia
|
180
|
|
|
#6
New Hampshire
|
|
Florida
|
180
|
|
|
#8
Maryland
|
|
Georgia
|
180
|
|
|
#9
Florida
|
|
Hawaii
|
180
|
|
|
#10
Indiana
|
|
Indiana
|
180
|
|
|
#11
Utah
|
|
**Iowa
|
180
|
|
|
#12
New York
|
|
Maine
|
180
|
|
|
|
|
Maryland
|
180
|
|
#4 -
Wisconsin; #7 - Nebraska;
#10 -
North Dakota – see below.
|
|
Massachusetts
|
180
|
|
|
**Michigan
|
180
|
|
|
|
Mississippi
|
180
|
|
13 other states with no
state-wide minimum
|
Nevada
|
180
|
|
Delaware
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
New
Hampshire
|
180
|
|
Nebraska
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
New
Jersey
|
180
|
|
New
Mexico
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
New
York
|
180
|
|
North
Dakota
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
**Oklahoma
|
180
|
|
Oregon
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
180
|
|
Texas
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
**Rhode
Island
|
180
|
|
Wisconsin
|
Not specified in state policy.
|
|
South
Carolina
|
180
|
|
Arkansas
|
Set by the Standards for Accreditation of
Arkansas.
|
|
Tennessee
|
180
|
|
Idaho
|
Set by the board of trustees of each school
district.
|
|
Utah
|
180
|
|
Missouri
|
No minimum school days are required.
|
|
Virginia
|
180
|
|
Ohio
|
Set by the board of education of each city.
|
|
**Washington
-Gr. 1-12 180 days/K 180.5 days
|
|
South
Dakota
|
Set by local school board.
|
|
West
Virginia
|
180
|
|
Montana
|
Set by the trustees of a school district.
|
|
**Louisiana
|
177
|
|
|
|
|
Vermont
|
175
|
|
|
|
|
Wyoming
|
175
|
|
|
|
|
Kentucky
|
170
|
|
|
|
|
Minnesota
Gr. 1-11 – 165/ K –
850 hrs.
|
|
|
|
|
Colorado
|
160
|
|
|
|
|
*
From Education Commission of the State- https://reports.ecs.org/comparisons/instructional-time-policies-2023-02
|
**Like
Colorado, minimum # of hours of instruction required, between 1,000 &
1,100 hours. But they meet 177-185 days.
|
Addendum B - “Student Contact Days” –
Average 146.5
40 Colorado school districts on a
“Reduced Calendar” (all on a four-day school week)
Districts use various terms: Teacher-Pupil
Days; Student Days; Student Attendance Days; Instructional Days. Numbers come from
district calendars on their website or in my communication with the districts.
District
|
# of student contact days
|
1. Aguilar
|
143
|
2. Akron
|
149
|
3. Alamosa
|
148
|
4. Arickaree
R2
|
144
|
5. Bayfield
|
148
|
6. Bennett
|
148
|
7. Big
Sandy
|
147
|
8. Burlington
|
MS/HS 144 - Elem 142
|
9. Calhan
RJ-1
|
146
|
10. Centennial
|
147
|
11. Center
|
147
|
12. Cheyenne
County RE-5
|
144
|
13. Custer
|
146
|
14. Deer
Trail
|
144
|
15. District
27J
|
150
|
16. Dolores
County
|
MS/HS 142.5–Elem 140.5
|
17. East
Grand
|
145
|
18. East
Otero (La Junta)
|
MH 143 – Elem 141
|
19.
Edison
54JT
|
148
|
20.
Ellicott
|
144
|
21.
Fort
Morgan
|
151
|
22.
Garfield
16
|
H 153 –M 151– Elem 150
|
23.
Hanover
|
146
|
24.
Hayden
|
143
|
25.
Haxten
|
149
|
26.
Holyoke
|
150
|
27.
Huerfano
|
142
|
28.
Ignacio
|
146
|
29.
Lamar
|
146
|
30.
Las
Animas
|
148
|
31.
Mancos
|
144
|
32.
Moffat
|
143
|
33.
Montezuma-Cortez
|
MS/HS 148 -
Elem 146
|
34.
Otis
|
148
|
35.
Peyton
|
148
|
36.
Platte
Canyon
|
152
|
37.
Pueblo
60
|
150
|
38.
Vilas
|
143
|
39.
Weld
RE-1
|
153.5
|
40.
West
Grand
|
145
|
AVERAGE
|
146.5
|
Addendum C - “Student contact days”
Colorado, New Mexico, the United
States
Colorado’s 10 largest districts – all
over 25,000 students
|
Student Contact Days*
|
Enrollment
2023-24
|
Denver County 1
|
174
|
88,235
|
Jefferson County R-1
|
171
|
76,172
|
Douglas County Re 1
|
173
|
61,964
|
Cherry Creek 5
|
Elem/MS – 172 – HS – 176
|
52,419
|
Adams-Arapahoe 28J
|
168
|
39,148
|
Adams 12 Five Star Schools
|
Elem/MS – 165 – HS- 166
|
34,998
|
St Vrain Valley RE1J
|
174
|
32,506
|
Poudre R-1
|
Elem–173 MS/HS–176
|
29,914
|
Boulder Valley Re-2
|
172
|
28,362
|
Academy 20
|
177
|
26,607
|
Average
|
172.3
|
|
*Dates from 24-25 calendar on
district websites or from phone calls with district offices.
In New
Mexico the gap between the 5-day school week and the 4-day week came to 22
days. But note the average number of days in New Mexico for schools on a
four-day week, compared to the average I found for 31 districts in Colorado.
https://www.edweek.org/leadership/the-four-day-school-week-debate-video/2018/08
In Colorado the gap is greater and the
average school year in our four-day districts is shorter.
(5-Day School Week)
10 biggest districts
|
(4-Day School Week)
40 districts
|
Gap
|
172.3
|
146.5
|
25.8 days
|
In the United States:
“Nationally, the average school start
time among four-day school week schools is 7:56 AM, the average school day
lasts seven hours and forty-six minutes, and the average number of
student instructional days is 148.”
“Are All Four-Day
School Weeks Created Equal? A National Assessment of Four-Day School Week
Policy Adoption and Implementation,” by Paul N. Thompson, Katherine Gunter, John M. Schuna, Jr., Emily J. Tomayko, Oct. 2021, https://direct.mit.edu/edfp/article/16/4/558/97130/Are-All-Four-Day-School-Weeks-Created-Equal-A
Addendum D – Reporting to CDE –
meeting “minimum teacher-pupil contact” during the year
from CDE – 2023-2024 Data Pipeline
Directory
Individual
School Information: # of Elem. Hours Scheduled
|
Cannot
be fewer than 990 for elementary
|
Number
|
Individual
School Information: # of Secondary. Hours Scheduled
|
Cannot
be fewer than 1080 for secondary
|
Number
|
http://www.cde.state.co.us/datapipeline/2024-2025-directory-file-layouts-and-definitions
from CDE: Status of Reduced
Academic Calendar Approvals in Colorado
The law does require any district offering less than 160 days of
school to obtain prior permission from the Commissioner of Education. One of
the duties of local school boards is:
C.R.S 22-32-109 (n) (I) To determine, prior to the
end of a school year, the length of time which the schools of the district
shall be in session during the next following school year, but in no event
shall said schools be scheduled to have less than one thousand eighty hours
of planned teacher-pupil instruction and teacher- pupil contact during the
school year for secondary school pupils in high school, middle school, or
junior high school or less than nine hundred
ninety hours of such instruction and contact for elementary school pupils or less than four- hundred-fifty hours of such
instruction for a half-day kindergarten program. In no case shall a school be
in session for fewer than one hundred sixty days without the specific prior
approval of the commissioner of education.
(Bold mine)
All
schools must continue to meet or exceed the instructional hours that are
required by
statute
for elementary, middle, and high school schedules.
http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdeedserv/reducedacademiccalendar
Addendum E – Does “equal time” in
school lead to an equally strong education?
a. Research – on equal time
At the Colorado Department of Education’s website on Reduced Academic
Calendar Information, we find links to two research papers. One of them,
published by the Institute of Education Sciences, included this statement: (Bold
mine for all quotes)
“Relative to five-day schedules, 4DSW
districts tended to have shorter school years and longer school days, and they
typically offered less instructional time overall. A research team led by
Paul Thompson, University of Oregon, assembled the most comprehensive dataset
available on nationwide implementation of the 4DSW.”
“Reduced
calendar years: How are they implemented and how do they affect students,
teachers, and communities?” Institute of Education Sciences, Jan. 2024, https://drive.google.com/file/d/1eR47lbvl5Cfd8qctDYJ83TTRdaF07mBR/view
Thompson, professor of Economics at Oregon
State University, has done extensive research on the impact of the four-day
school week on student achievement. He has found different outcomes based in
part on the amount of instructional time given to students on a four-day week. One
of his studies found a negative impact on learning, overall, but he made a key
distinction.
From the Abstract:
We find reductions in both math and English/language arts
achievement when examining four-day school weeks nationally, but these
aggregate effects appear to be masking important heterogeneity due to differences
in overall time in school across districts. When stratifying four-day week
districts into districts with low, middle, and high levels of time in school,
we find statistically significant negative effects on math achievement for
four-day school week districts with low time in school, but no
statistically significant effects for four-day school week districts with
middle or high time in school. Our findings suggest that maintaining
sufficient overall time in school should be a key consideration for school
districts contemplating four-day school week adoption.
“Only a matter of time? The role
of time in school on four-day school week achievement impacts,” Economics
of Education Review, by Paul N. Thompson and Jason Ward,
Feb. 2022, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0272775721001138?via%3Dihub
From
the full study - “Adequate time may negate potential negative achievement”
“… our results suggest that providing
adequate instructional time in conjunction with the four-day school week should
be a key focus of policymakers interested in adopting these four-day school
week schedules. Adequate time in school may negate potential negative
achievement impacts inherent to the four-day school week schedule (e.g.,
weekend learning loss; earlier school start times). Low time in school in
conjunction with the four-day school week appears to be extremely problematic
for academic achievement and school districts and states should be cognizant of
these negative consequences.”
Econstor, June 2021, https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/236492/1/dp14461.pdf
b.
An anecdotal response to the research (from one who taught for 18 years):
Teachers and parents are likely
to see a significant problem with the argument that offering “the same amount
of instructional time” in four days rather than five will produce equal
learning outcomes. Only counting the total amount of time in school fails to
look at how well students learn—at certain times of the day;
specifically, how well do they focus and learn after they have already
been in school for six hours, with two hours to go. These issues are
especially relevant (see section d, below) for young students and for
students with special needs.
Colorado schools on a four-day week are in session roughly eight hours.
Here are six sample times (opening bell to closing bell) from four-day schools around
the state:
7:30 – 3:35 / 7:45
– 4:05 /
7:50 – 4:10 / 8:00 – 3:47 / 8:00
- 4:00 / 8:00 – 4:10
/ 8:30 – 4:20
Strong
research from the halls of academe might not get at a question teachers and
parents would raise:
How many boys and girls focus and engage and learn as well between 2
pm and 4 pm as they do in the morning?
All of us can recall our own
experience in school and our struggle to be as attentive and alert late in the
school day. We admire the ability of many boys and girls who give their best to
their teachers and the subject matter after six hours in school, with two more
hours still ahead. And yet we doubt most are learning as well as they could in the
morning. And these classes between 2 pm and 4 pm take place four days a week.
Eight hours a week.
Two specific points:
1. Most elementary schools speak of reading and
math as their two “most important subjects” and invariably schedule reading
and math classes in the morning. It is telling that principals and teachers
believe their students will be most capable of tackling these two key subjects early
in the school day. Does anyone in our four-day elementary schools teach reading
and math between 2 pm and 4 pm? If not, aren’t there good reasons for that?
2. We are all paying close attention to reports
about the lack of focus when students have their cellphones in class. We, the
adults, are creating policies to address this concern. Why?
Because it is our responsibility to
help students focus as well as possible during class time.
In that same vein,
we must ask ourselves if, by creating this unusual structure—the eight-hour
school day—we are helping our students focus as well as they can when in a more
traditional 6- to 6 ½ hour school day.
c. My own attempt at “research”
On school and district websites on the four-day week,
one can find some academic schedules that respond to a few of the concerns,
above. In looking at school schedules, I see more hands-on classes late in the day,
such as welding, engineering, art, music, drama. Also, classes called
“advisory” or “exploratory.”
I had hoped to learn more by sending out the following note to 11 districts.
I am writing to a number of Colorado schools
and districts on the four-day week schedule to try to learn more about the
longer school day. I have been to several schools and have seen how it works. I
have not been to your district. I hope you might be able to tell me a little
about the classes or subjects that are taught in the final part of your school
days.
A
question many raise about the longer day is what subjects/content students are
able to engage in well late in the school day – the final hours, specifically.
It would help to learn if that is a concern for you, and if so, how you address
it.
I am
not asking for more than a paragraph to explain what classes/content/sessions
you offer late in the school day.
In most cases,
where I was able to find a school or district’s Bell Schedule, I added a note
like this:
At
xxx, I am asking about the last two periods in the xxx schedule – Period 7 –
2:12-3:09 and Period 7 – 3:13-4:10.
or At xxx, I am asking about the 6th and 7th hour:
2:23 - 3:20 and
3:23 - 4:18 for grades 6-8.
Unfortunately, I did not hear back from
anyone.
d. Other comments on that LOOONNNGGG day for our kids.
1.
Barbara McLachlan is chair of Colorado’s House Education Committee. In the
summer of 2019 she told The Colorado Sun that it was “time for Colorado
to do a comprehensive study of its own now that a majority of districts have
made the switch. [She said:] ‘I want to know how they reorganize their day; if
the kids and teachers are exhausted at the end of that longer, 10-hour day;
how sports fit in there.’”
(Bold mine)
“Colorado
made kindergarten a priority. But when it comes to four-day school weeks,
lawmakers don’t see a problem,” The Colorado
Sun, Brian Eason, Aug. 29, 2019.
https://coloradosun.com/2019/08/29/four-day-schools-politics/
2. Karen Cheser, Superintendent, Durango School
District 9-R
“Durango’s goal is to
have its graduates attain grade-level proficiency or higher in all subject
areas, and also acquire the district’s ‘portrait of a graduate’ competencies
like agile thinking and confident communicating. Decreasing the number of
days kids are in school and making those days longer ‘isn’t the appropriate
setting for students to be able to acquire those skills and competencies,’
in Cheser’s view.”
(Bold mine)
“Doing
Less with Less: How a four-day school week affects student learning and the
teacher workforce,” Keystone Policy Center, by Gottlieb,
Lagana, and Schoales. https://www.keystone.org/doing-less-with-less-how-a-four-day-school-week-affects-student-learning-and-the-teacher-workforce/
3. Philip Qualman, Superintendent, Eagle County School District
“… districts
that are doing four-day, I understand that they’re meeting the hour requirement
just like five-day districts are, but I think that there’s only so much
content that you can expect students to learn in a day and to try to jam it all
into fewer days, I think practically it just doesn’t make sense to me.”
“Four-day school weeks have
exploded across Colorado districts — and are setting students back,” The Colorado Sun, by
Erica Breunlin, Aug. 14, 2024, https://coloradosun.com/2024/08/14/four-day-school-weeks-colorado-results/#:~:text
4.
“Pros and Cons of the
Four-Day Week”
“However,
opponents argue that longer school days can be difficult for students,
especially those in elementary grades.”
“Four-Day
School Week Overview, NCSL”, June 28, 2023.
https://www.ncsl.org/education/four-day-school-week-overview.
Endnotes
[iii] From 180 days (in 1985) to 1,080 hours to 160 days, or less – Colorado Department of Education
History (Bold mine)
“In 1980, the Colorado legislature allowed districts to pilot alternative schedules… The law specified several criteria which had to be addressed prior to approval. An annual report was required.
“In 1980, three districts were approved for what was referred to as a four-day week. By 1981, twelve districts had been approved.
“In 1985, the Colorado legislature changed the required school year from 180 days to 1080 hours.
“In 1988, the legislature passed a provision that required any district scheduling less than 160 days of school to obtain permission from the Commissioner. In 1990, a formal application process was instituted by CDE.”