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Healthier Schools Initiative
Healthier Schools Initiative Menu |
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School Start and End Times
New Start & End Times
East, South, & West Elementary Schools | 8:40am - 3:10pm |
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NCHS & Saxe Upper Division (7-8) | 8:00am - 2:30pm |
Saxe Lower Division | 9:15am - 3:45pm |
Helpful Resources
Please click here or on the image below for helpful resources, research, and news coverage:
Healthier Schools - Start and End Times
STARTING SEPT 1, 2022
East, South, & West Elementary Schools | New Canaan High School & Saxe Upper Division (7-8) | Saxe Lower Division (5-6) |
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8:40am - 3:10pm | 8:00am - 2:30pm | 9:15am - 3:45pm |
As part of our mission to provide a world-class education for every child, NCPS continuously explores ways to improve the student experience at each of the district's five schools. As a result, we have been engaged in a process of researching and understanding the connections between school start and end times and student health and wellness. As this investigation evolved, the Board of Education committed to a goal focused on developing recommendations regarding school start and end times and understanding the related implications of these recommendations.
The New Canaan Public Schools are committed to doing all that we can to create the conditions for students to thrive and excel in our schools. Over the past several years, it has been reported locally and nationally that students are experiencing a high degree of pressure and stress, and New Canaan's students are not immune. While school start/end times are not a "solution" to the pressures and stress that our students are experiencing, we believe that a change, developed and implemented as part of a comprehensive solution and focused on student health and wellness, could be beneficial and is therefore worth exploring.
From the beginning, the district has taken a thoughtful and strategic approach to investigating this topic, such as:
Attending conferences in Washington, DC, Hartford, and elsewhere
Speaking to others involved in similar reviews, including those who have made a change and those who have chosen not to make a change
Reviewing the research in support of a change
Holding a meeting with internal stakeholders to share research and generate items for consideration
Partnering with Hanover Research, who assisted a neighboring district with their recent change, to perform research and administer a stakeholder survey
Partnering with Transportation Advisory Services (TAS) to develop options for Board and community discussions and to perform a transportation study
Conducting feasibility routing analyses of the various options and outlining implementation strategies with the district's bus contractor
Organizing a focus group discussion with teachers, building administrators, BOE members, district administrators, parents, and members of the Healthy School Start Times New Canaan to identify guiding principles and other considerations from the various perspectives
Meeting with faculty and staff at all five buildings to share scenarios developed by TAS, receive feedback, and open lines of communication
Meeting with union leaders of New Canaan's six employee unions to share findings from the study and open lines of communication
Throughout the process, the anticipated benefits of a change, the challenges of making a change, the complexity of the New Canaan school system, and the many considerations that must be accounted for in weighing a change continue to factor into the discussions and planning. Some of the areas of focus and related considerations include:
Research on the relationship between adolescent student sleep patterns and school start times
A growing body of research suggests:
A significant number of American teenagers experience detrimental pressure and stress in their daily lives
Many teenagers are not getting the recommended amount of sleep (8-10 hours/night)
Sleep deprivation in teens negatively impacts emotional intelligence and contributes to increased feelings of pressure and stress, poor decision-making, difficulties with learning, and challenges with executive functioning
This same research suggests that later start times for adolescent students can help them get more sleep, thereby strengthening their emotional intelligence and helping with decision-making, learning, and executive functioning
A dearth of formal research related to student start/end times for younger students leads us to consider anecdotal feedback from staff working with these students
Elementary faculty and staff report that late afternoon times (after 3:00) are not conducive to young student learning, and that early dismissals are disruptive to the classrooms
Middle school (upper division) faculty and staff report that 7-8 grade students appear tired in the morning
New Canaan students at all grade levels are highly involved participants in extra-curricular activities
Over 70% of NCHS student participate on one or more teams each year in our athletics program
100's of students participate annually in the Visual and Performing Arts programs (drama, chorus, orchestra, band, etc.) at the middle and high school
Middle-level and elementary students widely participate in town-sponsored athletic and other activities, and often share facilities with school-based programs by utilizing them afterwards (i.e... fields, classrooms, auditoriums, etc.)
To be successful, any proposed change must be operationalized by the district. Therefore, the current 3-tier bus system must be understood and reviewed to identify opportunities for change
The current system is "highly efficient" according to TAS; therefore, there are no meaningful opportunities within the system to generate additional time for students
Our current 3-tier system is grouped as follows:
Tier 1: NCHS & Saxe 7-8 (7:30 - 2:05)
Tier 2: Saxe 5-6 and South (8:15 - 2:50)
Tier 3: East and West (9:05 - 3:35)
School start and end times are primarily driven by the time it takes all buses to bring students home at the end of the day and return to the next school at dismissal
The school district currently contracts enough buses to support the existing 3-tier system. The current system is highly efficient and without excess capacity
Additional buses are approximately $100,000 each / year
Significant changes to the current 3-tier system requires additional buses
The district is committed to doing all that it can on behalf of the students in our care, and we are dedicated to completing this research and study balancing thoroughness with urgency to ensure that any recommended change meets the stated need of adjusting adolescent start times while avoiding negative consequences for students, staff, and the entire New Canaan community.