But please allow me, for a moment, to park my cynicism on
the GWB on ramp. Let’s say that Christie’s call to lengthen the school day and
calendar year is a legitimate proposal. Does the proposal have merit? From my
reading of the research the answer would be yes, but…
There is actually quite a bit of research available on
longer school days or longer school years. Here is what we know with some
certainty. This information comes from The
Chalkboard Project’s review of the research on extended learning time.
·
The connection between time and learning is not
straightforward, and depends on how effectively learning time is being used.
·
Additional
learning time is effective only when existing
learning time is well used.
·
Extended learning time can be effective for all
children, but is more effective for children of economic disadvantage than for
children from middle or high socio-economic status households.
·
Extended learning time programs have been more
effective in primary and secondary grades than in middle school.
·
Extending the school day is more cost effective
than extending the school year.
·
Any program should start small, gather evidence
and expand over time.
So, a serious proposal for
extended days should include the following:
·
An audit of how well school time is used
currently. There can be a wide difference between time in school for children
and time devoted to learning. Schools should work to maximize current learning
time, before adding additional time. This could be as broad based as
reorganizing school schedules for maximum learning and as simple as making sure
the public address system is turned off during the school day.
·
Provide a combination of instructional support
and enrichment activities likely to engage all students in learning.
·
Include arts exploration and education along
with core subject enrichment or remediation.
·
Involve teachers in the planning, leadership
and implementation of the program.
·
Involve the parents and community in the
planning of the program.
If I ruled the education world, I would include two other
things in the extended day/extended year plan. The first may well be the best
way to use a longer day that could be devised.
1.
Teacher Professional Development – The best
possible use I can imagine for a longer school day is to use the time for
teachers to meet together to share ideas and improve practice. Here I am
thinking about the Professional Learning Community model, where teachers meet
together collegially to discuss lessons, strengthen instructional practice,
problem solve individual student concerns and receive occasional input from
supervisor or experts in various fields. Teachers in other countries use models
like Lesson Study to continually improve practice. In this country teachers
only seem to be valued for the time they spend in front of students. In years
past unions fought long and hard to get professionals a few minutes of planning
time during the school day. Political leaders and the public need to understand
that real, intensive professional collaboration could do more than any other
single factor to improve student learning.
2.
Summer Literacy Enrichment – Summer loss
syndrome is real. It is well documented that children living in poverty suffer
a loss of literacy skills over the summer months. Some school districts have
combatted this by extending the school year into the summer and taking brief
breaks several times during the regular school year. I don’t see that happening
in most places. What all school districts should commit to is a program of
literacy enrichment for children over the summer. This could go a long way to
reducing some of the summer loss that many children experience.
Christie has promised that details of his extended day plan
will come out later. When they do, we will know if this is a serious plan or
just another way to batter teachers and public education. Let’s see if the plan
acknowledges the research; let’s see if the plan is fully funded.; let’s see if
teachers are included in the decision making and let’s see if this plan is
about improving school experiences for the public school children of New Jersey
or if it is just another traffic cone on the entrance ramp to a strong public
education system.
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