Why count staff development and parent-teacher conferences toward instructional hours?
Now, returning to the bill at hand, we must address two separate policy concerns: the bill’s stated intent and its actual policy change. The bill’s stated intent is to add instructional time to the calendar to improve academic outcomes.The policy change, however, alters the state’s incentive structure for districts regarding staff development and parent-teacher conferences. These concerns raise two distinct policy questions:
- How much instructional time is best for students?
- How, if at all, should the state incentivize staff development and parent-teacher conferences?
The current discussion around HB 3151 seems to conflate these two concerns.
we must address two separate policy concerns: the bill’s stated intent and its actual policy change.
Helpful References
Andersen, S. C., Humlum, M. K., & Nandrup, A. B. (2016). Increasing instruction time in school does increase learning. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113(27), 7481–7484. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516686113
Kidron, Y., & Lindsay, J. (2014, July). The effects of increased learning time on student academic and nonacademic outcomes: Findings from a meta-analytic review. REL Appalachia, American Institutes for Research.
Kraft, M. A., & Novicoff, S. (2024). Time in school: A conceptual framework, synthesis of the causal research, and empirical exploration (EdWorkingPaper No. 22-653). Annenberg Institute at Brown University. https://doi.org/10.26300/1xxp-9c79
Wedel, K. (2021). Instruction time and student achievement: The moderating role of teacher qualifications (ifo Working Paper No. 344). ifo Institute – Leibniz Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich.