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Andrew Camp – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
The four-day school week is a school calendar that has become increasingly common following the COVID-19 pandemic. Proponents of the calendar often claim that offering teachers a regular 3-day weekend will help schools better retain existing teachers and recruit new teachers to their district without incurring additional costs due to higher…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Teacher Effectiveness, School Schedules, Faculty Mobility
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Katie M. Ridgway – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2025
Local districts can benefit from a collaborative process for refreshing their master schedules to increase teacher planning time. Alongside national models for organizing the school day, local districts must account for regional factors such as resources, historical practices, community expectations, changing state requirements, negotiated…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Elementary School Teachers, Educational Planning, Time Management
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Brian A. Petrotta; Jason Stamm; Madeleine Reisbig – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2025
Due to the prosperity of sports and continued growth of sports media, colleges and universities are offering an increasing number of courses and majors related to the sports media industry. Via a systematic analysis of 76 syllabi from courses under the sports media umbrella at 30 colleges and universities, this study reveals what is being…
Descriptors: Athletics, News Reporting, News Media, Higher Education
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Sarah C. Fuller; Kevin C. Bastian – Urban Education, 2024
Later school start times have emerged as a potential policy to improve the sleep and educational outcomes of teenagers. This study uses a quasi-experimental comparative interrupted time series approach to examine a 90-min delay in start times in an urban district in North Carolina. Results show that the later start time resulted in more sleep for…
Descriptors: High School Students, Urban Schools, Public Schools, Disadvantaged Youth
Jilli Jung; Andrew Fenelon – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
A later school start time policy has been recommended as a solution to adolescents' sleep deprivation. We estimated the impacts of later school start times on adolescents' sleep and substance use by leveraging a quasi-experiment in which school start time was delayed in some regions in South Korea. A later school start time policy was implemented…
Descriptors: School Schedules, Adolescents, Sleep, Foreign Countries
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Alberto Ruiz-Ariza; Sara Suárez-Manzano; Alberto Mezcua-Hidalgo; Emilio J. Martínez-López – Educational Studies, 2025
The aim was to determine the effect of an 8-week programme of active breaks on memory, attention-concentration, mathematical calculation, linguistic reasoning and creativity in adolescent students. One-hundred-sixty-two adolescents (12.27 ± 0.47 years; range = 12-13 years) participated in this study. The intervention was based on four daily active…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, School Schedules, Memory, Attention
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Briana J. Taylor; Kahsi A. Pedersen; Carla A. Mazefsky; Martine A. Lamy; Charles F. Reynolds; William R. Strathmann; Matthew Siegel – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
Purpose: Developmental changes in sleep in youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are understudied. In non-ASD youth, adolescents exhibit a "night owl chronotype" (i.e., later sleep/wake timing) and social jetlag (i.e., shifts in sleep timing across school nights and weekends), with corresponding sleep problems. The purpose of this…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Sleep, Age Differences, Youth
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Michelle Jutzi; Thomas Wicki; Barbara Stampfli – International Journal for Research on Extended Education, 2024
Integrated all-day schools (ADS) follow a holistic approach, arguing that different forms of learning (informal, formal, non-formal) are equally important for students, and provide instruction and care by a constant team of teachers and care professionals. Using a qualitative longitudinal design, the research uses development phases to analyze the…
Descriptors: School Schedules, Foreign Countries, Extended School Day, After School Programs
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David Kahan; Thomas L. McKenzie; Maya Satnick; Olivia Hansen – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2024
Purpose: Studies tracking changes in physical education (PE) policy adherence after an intervention are scarce. In California, successful litigation against 37 school districts for not providing adequate PE time compelled district schools' teachers to post PE schedules online or on-site for 3 years. We performed a follow-up study 4 years after the…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Educational Policy, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation
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Aaron T. Berger; Darin J. Erickson; Kayla T. Johnson; Emma Billmyer; Kyla Wahlstrom; Melissa N. Laska; Rachel Widome – Journal of School Health, 2025
Background: We aimed to characterize relationships between delayed high school start time policy, which is known to lengthen school night sleep duration, and patterns in activity outcomes: physical activity, non-school electronic screen time (non-schoolwork), and sports and extracurricular activity among adolescents. Methods: We used data from the…
Descriptors: School Schedules, High School Students, Physical Activity Level, Computer Use
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Elizabeth Goode; Thomas Roche; Erica Wilson; John W. McKenzie – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
In immersive block models students learn over shorter teaching periods and with fewer concurrent units than in typical semester or trimester models. A core aim of many such innovations is to enhance students' learning outcomes; however, there are few investigations of student satisfaction at scale in immersive block models. This paper reports on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes, School Schedules, Public Colleges
Chloe R. Gibbs; Jocelyn Wikle; Riley Wilson – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
As women increasingly entered the labor force throughout the late 20th century, the challenges of balancing work and family came to the forefront. We leverage pronounced changes in the availability of public schooling for young children--through duration expansions to the kindergarten day--to better understand mothers' and families' constraints.…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Employed Women, Mothers
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Wahlstrom, Kyla L.; Plog, Amy E.; McNally, Janise; Meltzer, Lisa J. – Journal of School Health, 2023
Background: The benefits of delaying school start times for secondary students are well-established. However, no previous study has considered how changing school start times impacts sleep and daytime functioning for K-12 teachers. Methods: Teachers in a large suburban school district completed 3 annual surveys (pre-change n = 1687, post-change n…
Descriptors: School Schedules, Sleep, Well Being, Elementary School Teachers
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Kraljic, Elizabeth A.; Sidener, Tina M.; Reeve, Sharon A.; Reeve, Kenneth F.; Mastrogiacomo, Lori Bechner; Callahan, Ashley – Education and Treatment of Children, 2023
Studies employing multiple-schedule arrangements to bring social approaches (e.g., requesting attention, raising hand) under stimulus control have commonly used correlated contrived, continuous stimuli with at least one condition (e.g., displaying a green stimulus when attention is available and a red stimulus when it is not). Although imposing…
Descriptors: Special Education, Standards, Adolescents, Written Language
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van der Kleij, Sanne W.; Burgess, Adrian P.; Ricketts, Jessie; Shapiro, Laura R. – Child Development, 2023
We examined the relation between socioeconomic status (SES), vocabulary, and reading in middle childhood, during the transition from primary (elementary) to secondary (high) school. Children (N = 279, 163 girls) completed assessments of everyday and curriculum-related vocabulary, (non)word reading, and reading comprehension at five timepoints from…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Student Promotion, Socioeconomic Status, Secondary Education
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