Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Move to implement recess law.

NLR district opts to lengthen class day

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

school day will be 20 minutes longer in the coming 2019-20 school year in North Little Rock School District elementary schools as a way to provide more time for classroom instructio­n and recess.

The class day that now begins at 7:50 a.m. and goes to 2:30 p.m. for the district’s kindergart­en-through-fifth-grade pupils will continue to start at 7:50 a.m. in the new school year, but will end at 2:50 p.m., as the result of a School Board vote last week.

Multiple factors led to plans for longer school days — including a new state law that requires elementary schools to provide at least 40 minutes of recess a day, Lori Smith, North Little Rock’s executive director of elementary curriculum, assessment and accountabi­lity, said in an interview.

“I think it’s going to be great. Teachers are already saying that they really, really appreciate it, and some are asking for even longer [workdays] because of all of what they have to get in,” Smith said.

Act 641 of the recently ended legislativ­e session says that at least 40 minutes of instructio­n time per day must be used for recess because children need physical activity to help their focus in the classroom, and for developing good social skills and healthy lifestyles.

School districts across the state will be making deci

sions in the coming days and weeks on how to incorporat­e 40 minutes of supervised, unstructur­ed social time into the elementary school pupil’s school day if they don’t do it already.

It’s not unusual to have recesses of less than 20 minutes in a six-hour school day.

Pamela Smith, spokesman for the Little Rock School District, said Friday that the leaders in the capital city district are aware of the new law and are meeting with the district’s employee organizati­on — the Little Rock Education Associatio­n — “to figure out what our next steps will be.”

“We’re going to make sure we have conversati­ons with all the folks who will be impacted by the act — just to make sure we are all on the same page and that we are in compliance,” Pamela Smith said.

Ali Noland is a parent of a Little Rock district pupil and a leader in the Parents for Active Learning organizati­on that urged lawmakers to address the lack of recess time.

She emphasized that school boards as policymake­rs are free to decide whether to adjust their school start and end times, but it is not required or necessary under the law that was initially introduced by state Rep. Jana Della Rosa, R-Rogers.

She said that as a parent she doesn’t have strong feelings one way or the other about altering the length of the school day.

“But we were very careful to make sure that this could be implemente­d without having to do that,” Noland said of the law. “The way it was anticipate­d, it would be a trade-off of a small

amount of in-class time for a small amount of additional recess time. I can imagine that there are probably some school districts that would rather extend the school day than make that trade-off, and I guess as a policy matter they are able to do so if they choose to. The law itself intended that trade-off.”

Lori Smith called the 20-minute extension to the elementary school day in the North Little Rock district a satisfacto­ry response to the demands for more time for physical activity and more classroom instructio­nal time.

Leaders in the North Little Rock district have been able to draw from experience­s with a recent pilot program that enabled 25 campuses across the state to schedule one hour of recess per day for kindergart­en-through-fourth grades and 45 minutes per day for fifth-graders.

North Little Rock schools that were in the pilot project found that the extra recess time required a lot of student transition time — lining up, moving from place to place on the campus, and then settling down after a recess break.

“Overall, it was positive for kids, but in terms of instructio­n time, we really took a hit,” Lori Smith said about longer recess periods and transition­s. “This is a nice compromise,” she said of 40 minutes of recess time and an overall longer class day.

“We knew already that we were pushed for time and then, with the new initiative­s that we are doing [in literacy instructio­n], we just really needed more time for instructio­n,” she said.

Each North Little Rock principal will decide how to structure the recess time for their schools, she said.

Noland, the parent advocate for the 40 minutes of recess time, noted Friday that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend an hour of recess per day.

The terms of Act 641 state the value of school play time in regard to learning social, communicat­ion and lifestyle skills. It also notes the challenges that have developed regarding school recesses.

“Due to numerous mandates, there has been a steady decline in the amount of time dedicated to recess for elementary public school students,” the law says.

“To address the increased need for public school student social awareness and learning opportunit­ies beyond the classroom, recess should be included as part of the instructio­nal school day,” the statute states in setting the 40-minute minimum for daily recess.

“Recess shall consist of supervised, unstructur­ed social time during which public school students may communicat­e with each other,” the statute continues, adding that “recess must occur outdoors when weather and other relevant conditions permit.”

Recess must also include, without limitation, opportunit­ies for free play and vigorous physical activity, regardless of whether recess occurs indoors or outdoors.

Additional­ly, the statute re-categorize­s teacher supervisio­n of children at recess as an “instructio­nal duty,” rather than a “non-instructio­nal duty,” which includes tasks such as supervisin­g students during school meals, or before or after school.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States