Listen "Beware the Four Day School Week"
Episode Synopsis
As Oregon students return to the classrooms, watch out for a new fad that could make our state’s academic performance even worse.
That fad is known as the “four day school week.”
Oregon is one of only nine states that allows four day school weeks and more than 130 districts operate on a four-day schedule. Post-pandemic that number is sure to climb.
Many teachers and administrators like that it provides for a three day weekend every week.
Proponents push the four day week as a way to cut costs without harming academics. But this claim is only half true.
Moving to a four day school week does cut costs. But, it also cuts total instructional time.
Recent research on Oregon’s experience with the four day week finds that schools that moved to a four day week experience significant declines in reading and math achievement. Moreover, these declines worsen over time.
Everyone’s heard the old saying, “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t true.” The same goes for Oregon’s faddish adoption of the four day school week. It’s claims simply aren’t true.
I am Eric Fruits, Vice President of Research at Cascade Policy Institute, Oregon’s free market research organization.
That fad is known as the “four day school week.”
Oregon is one of only nine states that allows four day school weeks and more than 130 districts operate on a four-day schedule. Post-pandemic that number is sure to climb.
Many teachers and administrators like that it provides for a three day weekend every week.
Proponents push the four day week as a way to cut costs without harming academics. But this claim is only half true.
Moving to a four day school week does cut costs. But, it also cuts total instructional time.
Recent research on Oregon’s experience with the four day week finds that schools that moved to a four day week experience significant declines in reading and math achievement. Moreover, these declines worsen over time.
Everyone’s heard the old saying, “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t true.” The same goes for Oregon’s faddish adoption of the four day school week. It’s claims simply aren’t true.
I am Eric Fruits, Vice President of Research at Cascade Policy Institute, Oregon’s free market research organization.
More episodes of the podcast Cascade CounterPoint
QP $2 Trillion for Transit and No One Aboard
07/11/2025
QP: Over-sized and Over-priced Schools
17/10/2025
QP: Why Affordable Housing is Unaffordable
30/09/2025
QP: Oregon’s Electric Vehicle Policy Fail
23/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.