Hot on HuffPost Parents:
Charlotte Robinson: LISTEN: How Gay And Lesbian Couples Become…
New Turnaround Teacher 'Trying To Get It Right' In Tough School
Four-Day School Weeks Gain Popularity Across U.S.
Filed under: In The News
Chairs sit empty at Hunt Elementary School in Fort Valley, Ga., where students attend school just four days a week to save money. Credit: Peter Prengaman, AP
Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are off.
Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.
It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said Superintendent Susan Clark.
"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."
The results? Test scores went up.
So did attendance - for both students and teachers. The district is spending one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.
And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first time in years, Clark said.
The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring in subjects where they're struggling.
On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care" at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a day per student.
Experts say research is scant on the effect of a four-day school week on student performance. In fact, there is mostly just anecdotal evidence in reports on the trend with little scientific data to back up what many districts say, said University of Southern Maine researcher Christine Donis-Keller.
"The broadest conclusion you can draw is that it doesn't hurt academics," said Donis-Keller, who is with the university's Center for Education Policy, Applied Research and Evaluation.
Many districts that have the shortened schedule say they've seen students who are less tired and more focused, which has helped raise test scores and attendance. But others say that not only did they not save a substantial amount of money by being off an extra day, they also saw students struggle because they weren't in class enough and didn't have enough contact with teachers.
The school district in Marlow, Okla., is switching back to a five-day week after administrators decided students were not being served well by attending school only four days. The 440-student district tried the shorter week the spring semester this year to save $25,000 in operation costs.
"It was harder on the teachers. We were asking the kids to move at a quicker pace," said district Superintendent Bennie Newton. "We're hoping the four-day week won't come into play next year."
The move by Peach County in Georgia gets mixed reviews.
Parents like Heather Bradshaw worry that their children are getting shortchanged on time with teachers.
"I don't feel like they're having the necessary time in the classroom," said Bradshaw, a single mother with a fourth-grade son at one of the county's three elementary schools. "The schedule has slowed him down."
Other parents prefer the shorter schedule and don't mind the hassle of finding a babysitter one day a week.
"It makes the children's weekend a little better, so they get more rest," said LaKeisha Johnson, who sends her fourth-grade daughter to the Boys & Girls Club on Mondays.
The trend of four-day school weeks started in New Mexico during the oil crisis of the 1970s and has been popular in rural states where students have to commute a long way. Other districts have used it as a way to try to fix schools with a long history of poor student performance by shaking up the schedule and giving children more time to study outside of school.
Georgia, Oklahoma and Maine have changed their laws in the last couple of years to allow districts to count their school year by hours rather than days, allowing for a four-day week if needed. Hawaii schools were off every other Friday this year for schools to save money, giving them the state with the shortest school year in the country.
From California to Minnesota to New York, districts - mostly small, rural ones with less than 5,000 students - are following the trend, hoping to rescue their bleeding budgets.
For Peach County, the four-day week was enough of a success that the school district is trying it again next year, Clark said. The move saves $400,000 annually and is popular among teachers and students because they get extra rest, she said
"Teachers tell me they are much more focused because they've had time to prepare. They don't have kids sleeping in class on Tuesday," she said. "Everything has taken on a laser-light focus."
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL. This article was written by JOSEPH WHITE, Associated Press Writer.
Related: States To Establish Uniform Standards for Teaching
Your<span>Voice</span>
Ask Us Anything About Parenting
Recently Asked
- When A father does not visit his children because the new girlfriend has said "it's me or the kids"...how can the children be protected
- Have time for a girlfriend? Say he has a newborn things didnt work out w/the childs mother but he is there for the child 100% does he have time for so...
- My sister could be my mother found old diary of hers had relations with father also old hospital papers showing she gave birth same day I was born. c...












ReaderComments (Page 1 of 4)
6-04-2010 @ 2:23PM
Amanda said...well, in the area mentioned in the article where we live it is certainly helping the enrollment at oru private and parochial schools!
Reply
6-04-2010 @ 2:24PM
Ang said...I'm sure the parents love finding a place to send their kids every Monday while they have to go to work....
Reply
6-07-2010 @ 2:57PM
kenzay said...School should not be daycare! It's exactly that mentality hindering the students who wish to actually learn things. Our school calendar was developed long ago when we were an agrarian society and it needs to change. Innovation is fueled by demand for improvement, and it may turn out to be a great thing. Let's see if kids function better under these circumstances. Oh, and saving people's jobs happens to be a good thing too!
6-04-2010 @ 3:05PM
J.J. said...You can blame capitalism on that on.....This country is WAAAY overdue for 2 things: overtime pay after 8 hours of work a day, and the 4-day WORK week to match the school week.
Give it few years,..... some of us won't be as smug about communism falling.
6-04-2010 @ 4:33PM
Kyle said...I don't know what capitalistic country you live in J.J. but I live in the US. Here, I think every single private sector job I've had paid overtime for over 8 hours in a day, whether small business or corporation. Some of those jobs allowed me to work 3 or 4 days or 5 or 6 days if I wanted. You can blame that awful capitalism on that AND competitive and low prices on products and services. Now that I think about it, the only job that didn't allow me to get paid overtime for over 8 hours a day is the government job I have now, though in it's defense, I get too choose my own hours as long as I get the work done. By the way, that philosophy should probably apply towards schools as well. As long as the job gets done who cares how many hours it took?
6-04-2010 @ 4:25PM
Faith said...Why not plop junior down in front of the TV with a Big Mac, fries and a Coke. That could solve the problem!
6-04-2010 @ 7:22PM
diane said...I don't get it. Are you equating school with daycare?
6-06-2010 @ 1:41PM
J.J. said...Well, thank you, Kyle, for confirming the 40-hour overtime rule with your government job. I know you capitalism-worshipping republicans would use any opportunity to discredit the "government" only when a working-man-favoring Democrat is in the White House, but the point is, the law STILL remains that way after decades. Period.
And be thankful that you have been fortunate enough to be employed by that so-called "private sector" employer who agreed to pay you OT after 8 hours a day (if they really did, they did it voluntarily) Some of us aren't so lucky, and have actually lost our overtime when the money-grubbing scumbag "private sector" employer we worked for told us to punch out early at the end of the week just so they wouldn't have to pay OT on a minimum- wage job. I'm actually going back a number of years, but the law remains the same.
6-04-2010 @ 7:54PM
womensan said...So the issue, Ang, isn't what might be easier on our kids and make them just as smart, but that it's inconvenient to the adults? How awful for parents to have to be involved with decision making or "dealing" with their kids on a weekday -why that's just outrageous! If nothing else, it helps parents quit giving their completely over to a school system and get to do parenting. Who decided to sentence our youth to what in effect is almost a 40 hour work week, anyway?
That said, we have a private school in our district that holds classes 2 1/2 days a week. It's awesome! Cost is cheap, my kids get to enjoy childhood, learn skills by being around their elders, are bright and energetic for school days, yet graduates are winning awards and scholarships in great colleges. I have decided regular school takes twice as long because the kids get so tired and overwhelmed they can't take it in.
Reply
6-04-2010 @ 5:25PM
mark said...A 40 hour school week? I have been out of school for twenty plus years and I can say NO ONE goes to school for 40 hours. five days and 6 1/2 hours per day is only 32 1/2 hours. Your parents should ask for a refund for their taxes if you can't make a simple calculation such as that. As for your 2 1/2 day school week, I saw baloney. GWB no child left behind act has done exactly what it intended. It allows schools and society to push child along in a system where no one can hold them back. That is hold them back from a promotion to the next grade level without learning what was in the school's curriculum for that grade. You wait and see how well these kids take over our government and country. The entrophy and breakdown of American society is at hand and will continue until we start to demand that they compete with our competetors in the world. You are off your rocker pal and you will get what you deserve.
6-04-2010 @ 7:39PM
Bob Cape said...Oh, brilliant... your kids go to school 2 1/2 days a week, and it keeps them from getting "tired" of school?.. so they are all geniuses now?
What planet do you live on, lady? Most American kids are barely going to school now.. between laying off teachers, shuttering any school not teaching English to immigrants, and not requireing the "little darlings" to learn how to count over fingers and toes, and "like, not lurning how to spel", you're crippling them for a job anywhere except at "Daddy's company" now! Learning to be bored is a lifetime skill, and taking away their I-Pods and texting-phones would be a good start for these "little idiots in training"..
6-04-2010 @ 3:21PM
Angela said...That is why are children are so stupid. Do you know that the chinese children are in school 6 or 7 days a week? They are taking our jobs because they are so smart. When are we going to learn that school is very important?
Reply
6-04-2010 @ 4:25PM
womensan said...LOL, Angela, you cannot be serious?! China isn't taking our jobs because they are so smart, they are taking our jobs because the average worker will accept the YEARLY salary of $4,397.
6-04-2010 @ 4:29PM
havnfaith@aol.com said...Angela...
it should read "Our children", not "Are children"!!
6-04-2010 @ 4:43PM
CINDI said...the kid's are smarter than our's because they have been taught how to put posin, and lead in the stuff they ship to AMERICA, to kill us, we do not teach our kid's that way of life, thank the good lord above.
6-04-2010 @ 6:30PM
Anne said...No Angela, they are not taking our jobs from us.The Government is taxing corporations to death and so they leave taking the jobs with them to places like China. The Chinese Government forces the chinese people to work long hours pushing them to yield high volumes of products at extremely low wages.China has expanded it's wealth by abusing their workers rights and they pretend to lecture The US on humanitarian rights?. Hurray for communism huh? JJ are you paying attention?
6-14-2010 @ 9:23PM
cupcake said...Have you ever spent any time in China? I have been there many times(and in many places). Both my parents were born there and lived there until age 18. They are both U.S. citizens now and I am American Chinese.
While no country is perfect, the United States educational system cannot be compared with China's. The children in China are completely stressed out! The current suicide rate of teens is ASTRONOMICAL(it is surmised that this is mostly due to the stress of the educational Testing system)!!! Chinese kids aren't smarter..they are FORCED to MEMORIZE everything and then regurgitate it. Overall, they aren't happier and they aren't better off.
My children are half Chinese and have grown up here in the U.S. They are hard working, smart, happy, healthy, kind, empathetic AMERICAN children.
We must all simply take responsibility for our own children. We are blessed to have CHOICES: private schools, charter schools, home schooling, public school..etc. The people of China don't get to choose; They get what the Communist Party decides is best.
Comparing us with the Chinese is comparing apples with oranges.
6-04-2010 @ 3:22PM
David S. said...Good for you, Paula. Turning a rather mundane story like this and blaming Obama. But while we are at it, don't forget the erudite GW Bush did get into Yale with a "C" average, thanks to his Daddy.
Reply
6-04-2010 @ 3:25PM
Jay said...School all along for 100 years has been a good amount, busywork. It was partly to educate and teach children and teens Math, English, History, Science, Business, Music, Art, the things they need to know to be successful capable people. Also with the very hard lives many older babyboomers' parents lived, it was a way to give those parents as children and teens, an escape for a few hours from very hard farm or other manual labor, to learn and grow. Thanks to those parents, life for older babyboomers and others became easier. And school has become often busywork. Something to keep kids busy or babysat 5 days a week while their babyboomer parents work or whatever they want. And to keep teens from taking jobs from adults. My Mother was a teacher. Not the mean kind who took the job for the control and power, but the kind that loves to teach kids all they need to know to love learning and be successful as people. She went out of her way to help kids all she could. And got paid almost nothing. Which was a shame. But now some teachers and unions gripe about only making 60, 70, 80,000 a year. Most people don't make anywhere near that. Schools now are often about teaching all kinds of junk instead of basic important subjects. And they are about money. I and a few others finished a year early and I should have 2 years early, but was not allowed to because schools love to rack up attendance for money. Lots of extra hours or obsessed repetition has nothing to do with quality. When needing a particular class required to graduate; One of the best classes I took was a Science class during summer school. It was taught by a teacher who had just graduated. It was not rushed or harassing. It was pleasant and factual. The people who needed extra help got extra help by the teacher who was patient and great to pleasantly explain everything, and helped by other students. By the end of the short semester, even the D and F students understood DNA and everyone got either B's or A's, and loved the whole experience. Quality is quality.
Reply
6-04-2010 @ 4:14PM
tina said...busywork!!!!!----Maybe when you were in school---in the last 10 years there has been such changes to the public schools, that there is no time for busywork----there's barely time to teach what is needed in a day---school days should be longer! There is more accountability for teachers and schools---the problem is that there is no accountability for parents!!!!! Schools can teach until they are blue in the face but unless the students want to learn, it's hopeless!! Parents need to hold up their end of the bargain and parent when the kids are home!!!