Friday, November 03, 2006

School Days

A typical school day for public school highschool students begins slightly before 8:00 a.m. and goes until about 2:30 p.m. This is less than seven hours of class time minus time for the students to eat lunch. Thus, there is approximately five hours of actual education time for students and a number of high school students have a period or two for a study hall during which they are not receiving lectures. One of the basis for justifying "No Child Left Behind" was to determine which schools were failing and assist the United States in rising in the international statistics. Creating new tests will not benefit the schools; rather, we need a complete overhaul of the way we address the education process. First we need to start spending time educating students. A six hour day with study halls is not sufficient time for students to be educated. This is a nominal part of the day and the amount of time students can spend learning needs to increase. There is no reason that students cannot have their academic day go from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

The second basic change that needs to occur is the academic year needs to be lengthened. Most schools have only 180 days of class. Students get holidays throughout scattered throughout the year and are out of class by the end of June. With so much time out of class, students are not reaching their maximum potential of learning. There is no reason for a mid-winter break or a spring break and the reasons for having long summer breaks is obsolete. We are no longer an agricultural society and the students are not needed on the farm. Thus, we need to make the academic year a minimum of 220 days with only a short break (two weeks) between academic years. This will allow students to spend more time in the classroom learning opposed to out of the classroom forgetting their texts.

If we want to rise in the international rankings we need to look at what the other countries are doing to out educate the US. The most basic items are that they require the students to actually sit in class during the day, not just a nominal portion of the day, and they require that the students spend the majority of the year in the classroom, not just six months. Lets require our students to start spending time learning opposed to being on break and start trying to compete on a real basis with the international community with our education system.

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