School not meeting state minimums

CORNWALL — Cornwall Consolidated School (CCS) may have a reputation as a place to get a great education, but its students are actually spending less time than most in class.

New Principal Robert Vaughan told the school board Nov. 19 that he has discovered that the school schedule does not allow for the minimum 900 hours of instructional time during the school year.

He said reports filed annually with the state as required by law reflect school hours listed in the CCS handbook of 8:20 a.m. to 2:50 p.m.

“Some of the buses don’t even arrive until after 8:20. Students are not marked as tardy until 8:30. The more realistic school day is 8:30 to 2:45. I can’t sign a report that says otherwise,� Vaughan told the board.

Even following the stated school hours, CCS comes in just above the minimum, at about 910 hours. That only includes time spent in classrooms. Lunch and recess don’t count.

Every five minutes added to the school day amounts to 15 hours per school year, so not missing that 15 minutes per day would solve the problem.

But the solution is not as easy as it may seem.

Some of the school buses also go to the high school, dropping off at about 7:30 a.m. Vaughan said he needed to check to see if those buses could get elementary school routes finished on time.

Remaining in school later is an option, but one Vaughan would like to avoid. Some of the buses arrive at CCS with Housatonic students on board. There is simply not enough time to drop off all the Cornwall high schoolers and make it back to CCS on time, so the routes overlap.

Board members recalled that in the past there were issues with Housatonic students getting off the buses during the layover and engaging in activities such as smoking. No one is assigned to monitor them during that period.

Vaughan told The Journal there are only a few years of reports filed at the school, giving him little to go on to try to figure out how the school day shrank.

He is also not sure if passing time — the approximately 2.5 minutes it takes students to move between classes or the lunchroom — was subtracted in determining total instructional time.

In some school districts, teacher contracts may dictate the number of days and/or hours in the school year. In Cornwall, the contract states only that teachers need to be at school at least 45 minutes before and after students.

Vaughan said he does not know what the penalty might be for not meeting the minimum hours. He does not believe that the shorter day is undermining the quality of education at CCS.

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