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  • Teacher Time
  • July 2016: How much time do teachers get to plan and collaborate?

    July 26, 2016

    District Trendline, previously known as Teacher Trendline, provides actionable research to improve district personnel policies that will strengthen the teacher workforce. Want evidence-based guidance on policies and practices that will enhance your ability to recruit, develop, and retain great teachers delivered right to your inbox each month? Subscribe here.

    In order to be well prepared for daily instruction, teachers
    need time without students to plan and collaborate. This month, Trendline delves into how long the teacher workday is and how much of that time
    is devoted to planning and collaboration.

    Length of workday

    The average scheduled teacher workday across the 148 districts
    in our database is seven and a half hours. There are, however, 38 districts in
    our database that do not define the length of the workday in any of the standard
    documents we collect. 

    When we last considered the length of the teacher workday in
    2012, 86
    percent of districts for which we had data had workdays of at least seven
    hours. Since that time, we added several more districts to the Teacher Contract
    Database. Based on our sample of districts today, 89 percent have workdays of
    at least seven hours, an increase of three percentage points.

    Henrico County (VA) and Sioux Falls (SD) are the two
    districts where teachers’ scheduled workday is longer than eight hours, while
    teachers in New York City, Sacramento, Jefferson Parish (LA), and Toledo (OH) have the shortest
    scheduled workdays at six hours and fifteen minutes.

    Planning time

    Although the majority of a teacher’s workday involves
    teaching students, an important aspect of a teacher’s day is planning time.
    Just like last year,
    the most common amount of planning time teachers receive is 45 minutes per day.

    When it comes to elementary teachers’ planning time, those
    in Montgomery County (MD) receive the
    most at a minimum of 7 hours per week or an average of 84 minutes per day. For
    secondary teachers, those in Chicagoreceive the most planning time at an average of 100 minutes per
    day.

    Many districts define planning time in terms of periods. In
    the graph above, among the 49 districts listed as having an “other specification”
    for secondary teachers, 43 give teachers one period of planning time per day. Guilford County (NC) is also
    counted in this category and is the only district that explicitly leaves
    teacher planning time up to each school (though that may well be the policy of
    the 38 districts that are silent on this issue).

    Collaboration time

    While the majority of districts in the database
    do not discuss collaboration time, nearly half (43 percent) do mention
    collaboration in their bargaining agreements or board policies. Of these
    districts, roughly one third define specific amounts of time for teacher
    collaboration, another third explicitly mention collaboration as one use of general
    planning time, and the final third either mention collaboration as important or
    say that principals may designate some portion of general planning time for
    collaboration.

    Among the 21 districts that set aside time specifically for
    collaboration, most offer between 45 to 60 minutes per week for collaboration. In
    Dayton, secondary teachers get 30
    minutes of collaboration time daily while the issue is not addressed for
    elementary teachers. In Christina (DE), elementary teachers
    receive a maximum of 90 minutes per week for collaboration and secondary
    teachers receive a minimum of 90 minutes per week. In some districts, like Davis (UT), students have a shorter
    day once per week to allow time for teachers to collaborate.

    To learn more about planning time and collaboration, or one
    of the more than 100 other policy questions we track, visit the Teacher
    Contract Database
    .

    The Teacher Contract Database includes information on over 145 school
    districts in the United States:  the 60
    largest districts in the country, the largest district in each state, the member
    districts of the Council of Great City Schools, and districts which won the
    Broad Prize for Urban Education. The database features answers to over 100
    policy questions and provides access to teacher contracts, salary schedules,
    and board policies in addition to relevant state laws governing teachers.