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School Daze: Michigan's incredible shrinking school year

(Originally published March 12, 2009)

Imagine if the United States completely flopped in the next Olympics. Imagine if countries like Japan and South Korea dominated the medal count and it was obvious those athletes had simply out-worked, out-practiced, and out-performed ours.

The likely results… Public outcry. Fired coaches. Promises of a quick return to athletic glory would echo across the land.

We wouldn’t stand for shrinking commitment to the Olympics.

But we’re passively allowing a shrinking school year for our kids – especially in Michigan.

The Center for Michigan’s new special report — School Daze: Michigan’s Shrinking School Year” -- raises red flags about our state’s commitment to education. Our public school students are at risk of falling seriously behind their peers in others states and the rest of the world.

Click here to download the full report.


Click here to download a searchable database of scheduled school days, actual school days, cancellations, and actual instructional hours for more than 750 public school districts and charter schools across the state
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A summary of our findings:

  • 98 percent of Michigan public schools held fewer than 180 days of classes last year. 180 days is the standard across much of the United States.
  • Even at 180 days, the American system lags most of the industrialized world. Korean students attend school 225 days a year; Japanese students, 220. Americans’ test scores are lower than those of students in countries with longer school years.
  • Because of snow days and other cancellations, many Michigan districts are not meeting the state’s target of 1,098 hours of instruction per year. The average was 1,066 hours last year across 600 high schools. On average, cancellations (not made up) amount to about a week of lost instruction at each high school.
  • As a cost-cutting move, some districts are trading shorter school years for smaller educator raises.
  • School districts say they don’t have funds to return to the traditional 180-day calendar, much less expand the school year as experts urge.

School calendars are set by local districts, many of which have lengthened each school day to help compensate for lost days. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Michael Flanagan told us that phenomenon is “outrageous.”

“I think in general you’d find that districts still got raises but still went from 180 days down,” Flanagan said. “When we’re in a time-based model for most kids, you need at least 180 days. I called the (local school) superintendents out on this in September of 2007 saying it is the wrong direction. This may not be totally in their control if (local school) boards just want to get contracts done.”

Flanagan’s predecessor, Tom Watkins, said the shrinking school year is an alarming wake-up call.
“Are we going to live in the past or move boldly into the future?” Watkins said. “Reducing the time our children are in school is a move backward. This action will help bankrupt our state.”

Check how your local schools compare in the searchable spreadsheet. If you don’t like what you see, ask your legislators and school board members how we can expect Michigan students to spend fewer days in school and still compete in the complex, talent-driven, global economy.

Or accept that students in the rest of the world will have the intellectual muscle to beat your kids in the race for jobs, opportunities, and prosperity.

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