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A Multi-State, Student-Level Analysis of the Effects of the Four-Day School Week on Student Achievement and Growth

Four-day school weeks are becoming increasingly common in the United States, but their effect on students’ achievement is not well-understood. The small body of existing research suggests the four-day schedule has relatively small, negative average effects (~-0.02 to -0.09 SD) on annual, standardized state test scores in math and reading, but these studies include only a single state or are limited by using district-level data. We conduct the first multi-state, student-level analysis that estimates the effect of four-day school weeks on student achievement and a more proximal measure of within-year growth using NWEA MAP Growth assessment data. We conduct difference-in-differences analyses to estimate the effect of attending a four-day week school relative to attending a five-day week school. We estimate significant negative effects of the schedule on spring reading achievement (-0.07 SD) and fall-to-spring achievement gains in math and reading (-0.06 SD in both). The negative effects of the schedule are disproportionately larger in non-rural schools than rural schools and for female students, and they may grow over time. Policymakers and practitioners will need to weigh the policy’s demonstrated negative average effects on achievement in their decisions regarding how and if to implement a four-day week.

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Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/p96h-8a41
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Morton, Emily, Paul Thompson, and Megan Kuhfeld. (). A Multi-State, Student-Level Analysis of the Effects of the Four-Day School Week on Student Achievement and Growth. (EdWorkingPaper: -630). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/p96h-8a41

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