Systems resist push to expand the school day and year

January 10, 2012

By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas and Caitlin Emma

When it came time for Tyrone Almonte to decide where he wanted to go to high school, he had plenty of magnet schools to select from in the Hartford region.

He chose Greater Hartford Academy of Math and Science -- a school not only with significantly higher achievement rates than nearby schools but also one of a handful of schools in the state with a longer school day than the required state minimum.

"It's stressful because you have to wake up early, but in the end it's the better choice so it more than makes up for it," the freshman said while passing between classes of what will be a one hour longer school day than if he went to another school.

tyrone almo

Tyrone Almonte working on homework

By the end of the year, Almonte and his classmates will have spent 20 percent more time in the classroom than students in almost every other school in the state.

"Most school districts offer the minimum or near the minimum number of school days annually and that only a handful have average schools days longer than seven and one-half hours," Judith Lohman, a legislative researcher, wrote in a recent report for state lawmakers.

This reality comes against the backdrop of public officials routinely declaring that more instructional time is needed for improved student outcomes.

"We spend a phenomenal amount of time talking about time on task... How can we allow more time where it's needed?" Stratford school board member David R. Kennedy asked fellow members of the state task force looking at ways to close the achievement gap between low-income and minority and Caucasian students.

"Seat time makes a big difference," echoed Miguel Cardona, co-chairman of the Achievement Gap Task Force and principal of an elementary school in Meriden.

But this same group's recommendation last year to the legislature to extend time in the classroom failed to even made it out of the Education Committee. The State Board of Education has recommended since 2003 that districts extend their school day and school year to no avail.

"Despite [their policy] and available federal and state funding, the statewide average number of public school instructional days per year has remained at 181 days for the most recent seven years," Lohman reported.

Education Commissioner Stefan Pryor told WNPR that he believes more time in the classroom works.

"We do know what the best practices are that will [turn around failing schools] -- extended time is one of them," Pryor said, pointing to an example from New York City. "They were able to extend the day ...That was a way in which more resources, properly channeled, did lead to positive results."

The Connecticut Education Association, the state's largest teachers' union, and the state's superintendent association both have proposed increasing the school day in recent months.

Nearly half of the schools in the state open school the bare minimum and almost all the remaining schools build in no more than five extra days to cancel school for snow.

Five charter schools had students attend school three extra weeks on top of the minimum 180 days required during the 2009-10 school year, the most recent year for which the State Department of Education has data available. Six schools statewide -- four charters and two Hartford-area magnets -- have added an hour or more onto the traditional 7-and-a-half hour school day.

"Time is so tight. I wish all of our schools had this extra time," said Anne McKernan, the assistant superintendent of the Capitol Region Education Council, while touring the Math and Science Academy, one of the six schools in the state with an extended day.

"It would be difficult to accomplish what they have without that extra time."

An expensive initiative

Metropolitan Learning Center in Bloomfield used to require their students to attend school nine hours a day. But it was costly, as teachers had to be paid more to make up for their added time in the classroom.

Soon after lengthening the day, CREC officials had to scale back time as they grappled with balancing their budget.

"We just didn't have the funding for it anymore, so we had to cut it back," said Bruce Douglas, the leader of the interdistrict magnet school system. "We were running a deficit."

mendelson

Jake Mendelssohn, a teacher at Math and Science Academy: 'Going to school for this long will not hurt, it will only help.'

Douglas's district has been able to keep two of its schools open for longer hours, and he hopes he is able to keep them in place even as budgets remain tight.

Millions in federal and state dollars have been dished out over the past several years for districts promising to increase instruction time. However, those grants are only available to the state's very lowest-income and -achieving districts.

"The school day is not increasing because there's only money for this for the worst-off schools" Douglas said.

Schools that did receive grants to increase performance through extended learning time had their initiatives outlined in their applications. Bridgeport intended to use some of the $4 million it received to bargain with the teachers' union in exchange for longer days at three of their schools. New Haven promised to increase teacher salaries 10 percent for the added 11 school days and longer school days at one of their high schools.

Repeated requests to the State Department of Education to see how these grants have played out in increasing instruction time went unanswered.

In Bridgeport, Roosevelt Elementary School has made a "slight extension" to instruction by shaving time off lunch, but the school hours remain the same, said Principal Tania Kelley.

"I really wanted to have the teachers come in earlier, but it's something that I couldn't do at this time," she said, noting that she still needs to approach the teachers' union about the idea. If teachers come in at 8 a.m., they can use that time as their prep period and tack on another half hour of instruction during the school day.

"That's something I'd like to do in our second year with the grant ... The [School Improvement Grant] is not as fully implemented as we want it to be because we're in such a deficit," Kelley said.

Pressure to cut the calendar

Not only do many municipal leaders oppose the expansion of the required school day and year, but they also want officials to allow them to cut their calendar.

"We hear this consistently across the state," said James Finley, of the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities. "There's a certain irony to this will to increase the school calendar, [state officials] want us to do more with less money."

During former Gov. M. Jodi Rell's tenure, local officials on her Municipal Mandate Board told her budget director the required calendar was an unfunded mandate that is often too expensive for them to live up to.

Several districts officials have warned they may have a difficult time fulfilling the 180-day, 900-hour requirement after they had to close their schools for days because of Tropical Storm Irene and a freak October snowstorm that knocked out power for days. But Education Commissioner Stefan Pryor and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy have said waivers would be hard to come by.

Changing times?

President Barack Obama and U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan have repeatedly said they want to significantly increase the amount of time students attend school.

"Go ahead and boo me," Duncan told middle and high school students in northeast Denver. "I fundamentally think that our school day is too short, our school week is too short and our school year is too short."

The grants Bridgeport, New Haven and six other high-need districts in the state received were allotted in Obama's 2009 stimulus package to help district increase time in the classroom. But as Lohman's report for state legislators points out, these and other grants have not even made a dent since so few schools participate.

The school calendar is tied to state requirements; Washington does not get involved in school calendars. Thirty states, including Connecticut, require 180 days and the remaining states a few days less, except Ohio, which requires the most at 182 days. Most state require fewer than 1,000 hours of instruction.

"Some schools, very few though, are extending the school day... as desperate as we need another hour," said Robert Lynn Canaday, a retired professor from the University of Virginia's Department of Leadership, Foundations & Policy Studies, which helped school districts in 44 states restructure their schedules. "I would say money is the main reason [time has remained the same]. It means changing transportation. It means paying teachers more."

There is mixed research as to whether this added time would actually pay off. In Finland -- whose students consistently test higher in reading, writing, and math achievement by international standards -- students attend school for significantly fewer hours per year than their American counterparts.

But national and state officials and many experts are adamant that the added time will have an impact.

Officials at CREC say all the proof the state should need is the performance of the students at their schools with added time.

"Going to school for this long will not hurt, it will only help," said Jake Mendelssohn, a chemical engineer teacher at the Math and Science Academy. "It allows us more time to do the interventions we need to do when a student doesn't pick up a lesson right away. We aren't having to rush through the lesson, so we can cover everything in time."

 

 

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For the kind of yearly wages

For the kind of yearly wages plus plush benefits being enjoyed by the public school teachers, they should be required to spend considerably longer hours and days in the schools to teach and produce better, if not excellent, students. A working day should be at least of seven hours of solid teaching time (i.e. 35 hours a week of five teaching days), and a year should comprise of at least 250 teaching days, which excludes all holidays, the so-called preparation meetings etc. by teachers. The wages of teachers should be cut by 10% in the first phase and another

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As a parent of high school

As a parent of high school students/athletes, it is amazing to me how much it is expected that you play the chosen sport off season with a travel/AAU team that is coached by a high school coach(who is typically a teacher). You are told "you cant be expected to keep up" if you dont put in the extra time (and money) by the coach/teacher. However for academics we are told by the teachers that more time somehow or other wont reflect in better academics. Just go to any golf course on the shoreline in July to see

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35 hours a week?! I've been

35 hours a week?! I've been in education for 3+ years. My friends are educators, so are members of my own family... Even if teachers were in school for 7.5 hours, which is almost never the case because of parent and faculty meetings, after school clubs... And what do you think they do when they get "home"? How do you suppose they come to school READY to teach?!

Moreover, and case you haven't noticed, teaching is a high-stress, highly political job. Realkook, get real.

Teaching the same subject(s),

Teaching the same subject(s), from the same text book(s), year after year, is what most of the teachers do. Surprise, surprise !!! Coming as I do, from a family of scholars extending over a 400 year period, I know this for real, by watching my own colleagues over a period of more than half a century, and laugh at them every day and every year, about their delusional stress levels. If some teachers can not take the minimal heat levels generated in teaching, let them honestly leave the kitchen. Teaching is not a job or a career, but it is

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I am sorry but no one every

I am sorry but no one every truly comments about what is in the best interest of the child. Its always the teachers should work more hours cus thats what they get paid for. ?? Really??? I am not defending teachers, what i am defending are the rights to the children. They should not have to be in school more just because "magnet" schools are doing well with the extra time. THEY HAVE UNIQUE PROGRAMS TO KEEP THE KIDS INTERESTS.

STOP MANDATING ridiculous expectations of our children! Hire more help such

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Kook, you are clueless as to

Kook, you are clueless as to what is involved in teaching. Many if not most students don't magically sit quietly and dutifully take notes. It takes engaging lesson plans to get and keep their attention. These lessons don't appear with a wave of your pixie dust wand. Grading papers, contacting parents, PPT meetings, and working on committees like one for accreditation takes time. Most teachers work at night and weekends. Some spend summer time preparing for the upcoming year. Many spend their own money on supplies. In lieu of recklessly throwing bombs why not conduct a little research?!

Elementary school students

Elementary school students with larger shoe sizes tend to read at a higher level. Do we jump to the conclusion that growth hormones should be given to kids to boost reading scores?

This situation is called a common response because both shoe size and reading level are related to age (which is a lurking variable). This same misguided rational is used to justify longer days. GHAMAS (Math and Sci Academny) is successful largely because they draw in students who are high flyers - hence the term MAGNET school. Longer hours with a population of higher motivation levels certainly would lead

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It's possible that there are

It's possible that there are some teachers who use the same textbook and lesson plans year in and year out, & therefore work few hours. That, however, is not the norm. Those few teachers who aren't spending time crafting engaging lesson plans are the teachers that the CT Teachers Association (and the hardworking teachers) would like to see gone from the schools. Those few teachers give everyone a bad name - when the reality is that the teachers I know get to school early, leave late, and bring work home.

The reality is that more

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The bigger problem isn't the

The bigger problem isn't the length of school days, it is SOCIAL INEQUALITY.

@ Sammy Clemens - It's called

@ Sammy Clemens - It's called a "magnet" school because it attracts students from multiple districts, not because it attracts "high-flyers." The magnet school lottery is open to every student in the state of CT, and it is a "blind" lottery....literally like drawing names out of a hat. Schools like GHAMAS might end up with a higher percentage of "high-flyers" only because there are some students who simply can't handle the curriculum and end up returning to their neighborhood schools.

Hi, MagnetMom: What? Are

Hi, MagnetMom: What? Are there some students in magnet schools that simply can't handle the curriculum? Have you not realized that Sammy Clemens and some others are advocates to create an egalitarian society + (plus), where every individual should also achieve the same level of comprehension and competency (and compensation as well) as the top tiered ones? What does it matter if we throw a million dollars per head to grope in our fancy? After all, we can make all taxpayers bear such extra cost (in billions of dollars) even when we know that such experiments are bound

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"Schools like GHAMAS might

"Schools like GHAMAS might end up with a higher percentage of 'high-flyers'" Might?!

GHAMAS CAPT scores are highly comparable with those at Conard, a high flyer school that is also diverse. GHAMAS has 45% free reduced lunch and 75% minority student population compared to 23% and 40% at Conard yet the GHAMAS CAPT scores were only 2-3% below that of Conard in math and science. While GHAMAS has a strong program, they also have a high proportion of very strong students.

Yes, the lottery system allows for any student to apply but a high proportion of the students apply to

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