Published March 23, 2008 11:11 pm - OKLAHOMA CITY — In 1907, when Oklahoma became a state, the length of its school year was determined largely by the demands of life on the farm where students were expected to perform their share of the chores.
Educators, lawmakers promote longer school year
By Tim Talley
Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — In 1907, when Oklahoma became a state, the length of its school year was determined largely by the demands of life on the farm where students were expected to perform their share of the chores.
But 101 years later, educators and political leaders say tougher academic standards require public school students to be in the classroom longer to increase instructional time and better equip them for the demands of the 21st century’s global economy.
Gov. Brad Henry, Superintendent of Schools Sandy Garrett and the state Board of Education have thrown their support behind a plan to expand Oklahoma’s 175-day requirement for instructional days in a school year to 180 days.
“What we’re trying to do is to come to the national average, which is 180,” Garrett said. She said Oklahoma’s 175 days of instruction is the lowest in the nation. Regionally, Arkansas and New Mexico require 178 days of instruction, Texas 180 and Kansas 186.
“We believe we are shortchanging children,” Garrett said. “Our children are prisoners of time because we allocate so little time to learning.
“We’re in a global economy. Many, many, many countries have looked at a much longer school year than we have as our goal.”
But the $90 million cost of adding five more instructional days to the school calendar has forced state lawmakers to look for an alternative in what budget negotiators say will be a tight budget year.
The Republican-controlled Oklahoma House has approved a proposal that would add three days to Oklahoma’s school year and give schools more flexibility to set the length of the school day.
“If we’re trying to compete with China, then we have to deal with a large-scale expansion of time,” said the measure’s author, Rep. Tad Jones, R-Claremore, chairman of the House Education Committee.
The bill, which is pending in the Senate Appropriations Committee, would convert three professional training days for teachers into instructional days for students, extending the number of instructional days to 178.
The Oklahoma Education Association and some school superintendents have criticized the plan because it reduces training time for teachers. State law currently allows up to five professional days each year for teachers.
The bill also converts the 180 instructional and professional days that state law requires in a school year to 1,080 hours each year. Jones said the change would give school districts more flexibility to extend the length of a school day and possibly go to a four-day school week.
“Schools can be more efficient with their time. They can actually save some money,” Jones said. “You’re more flexible. I think that’s the word that schools want to hear.”
But, Jones added, “we’ve got to make sure it’s a quality education, not just a quantity.”
The plan would increase state educational costs by $13 million if school districts maintain their current schedules. But Jones said schools will actually save money if they extend the length of the school day and convert to a four-day week.