4-Day School Weeks in Michigan: Could It Benefit Kids and Parents?
Well, would you be ready for a four-day school week? The idea has been explored, but not since 'distance learning' and 'virtual meetings' have become part of our daily vocabulary. While it may initially sound unconventional, it has many supporters and detractors. In Michigan, you follow the law as long as you get 180 days and 1,098 hours each school year.
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So, if school districts can figure out how to get in the required hours and days, a four-day school week is possible and has been discussed at various levels of education in the Mitten State. What are the pros and cons? Let's look at some of the benefits and deficiencies this type of schedule presents.
How Children and Parents Would Benefit From a 4-Day School Week
- A longer school day would be necessary to make the abbreviated week work. However, with more hours in the day, teachers would have an opportunity to study a subject more thoroughly.
- Eliminating one day of instruction per week could cut utility and transportation costs by up to 20%.
- Making doctor and dentist appointments could be easier with an extra day, as could planning a three-day weekend with the family.
- More time with family and less time at school is thought to improve overall being.
- The environmental impact of removing a fleet of buses from the road and a line of idling cars in a school pick-up or drop-off line could be significant.
The Challenges Presented to Parents, Children, and Teachers
- A longer school day means teachers must hold your child's attention longer. Your child may be an angel, but think of that other kid in the neighborhood who bounces off the walls and never stops asking, 'Why? ' Now, take that kid and multiply that by 28, then imagine trying to get all of them to focus for more than 30 seconds.
- School districts might save on utilities, but your daycare bill increased by 20%, too. Not to mention the logistical challenge of a single-day drop-off at the end of the work week.
- With one less day in school, there is less time available and opportunities for extracurricular activities. Participation in sports, academic clubs, and the arts could decline.
- That extra family time could result in learning loss, as some studies show longer breaks between school days can reduce retention.
- It would be difficult to manage the impact on lower-income families, who rely on school services such as meals.
This topic has been discussed at various government levels without any serious consideration. Some districts have adopted the 4-day school week, most successfully in Republic-Michigamme Schools.
Would it work in the rest of the state? Maybe if more employers moved to a similar calendar. That extra day off sounds great, in theory, though. Imagine how many quality teachers you could attract with a schedule like that.
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Gallery Credit: Allison Rapp