4-day school weeks gain popularity across US

By DORIE TURNER, Associated Press Writer

Fri Jun 4, 9:16 am ET

FORT VALLEY, Ga. – During the school year, Mondays in this rural Georgia
community are for video games, trips to grandma's house and hanging out at
the neighborhood community center.

Don't bother showing up for school. The doors are locked and the lights are
off.

Peach County is one of more than 120 school districts across the country
where students attend school just four days a week, a cost-saving tactic
gaining popularity among cash-strapped districts struggling to make ends
meet. The 4,000-student district started shaving a day off its weekly school
calendar last year to help fill a $1 million budget shortfall.

It was that or lay off 39 teachers the week before school started, said
Superintendent Susan Clark.

"We're treading water," Clark said as she stood outside the headquarters of
her seven-school district. "There was nothing else for us to do."

The results? Test scores went up.

So did attendance — for both students and teachers. The district is spending
one-third of what it once did on substitute teachers, Clark said.

And the graduation rate likely will be more than 80 percent for the first
time in years, Clark said.

The four days that students are in school are slightly longer and more
crowded with classes and activities. After school, students can get tutoring
in subjects where they're struggling.

On their off day, students who don't have other options attend "Monday care"
at area churches and the local Boys & Girls Club, where tutors are also
available to help with homework. The programs generally cost a few dollars a
day per student.

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