Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Time as a Resource

About a month ago I published a piece titled 'Newton's Law of Motion'. In that article, my focal point was property tax reform. We discussed the idea that if we reduce one side of the budget ledger, we have to reduce the opposite side of the ledger an equal amount or risk a spending deficit. Sounds simple in theory. In fact, on the revenue side it probably is. Reduce income by $200,000? Ok, done (not really, but hang with me a minute). The challenge comes when you have to balance that reduction out on the expenditure side of the ledger. Turning theory to practice becomes a much steeper hill to climb. Human nature would suggest everyone is in favor or reducing the expenditure side of the ledger: until it impacts a program or initiative that is near and dear to their own hearts. Exhibit 'A': Just turn on the local news tonight and watch the story about any business, school, local government that is cutting costs. 

In any event, I digress. Today isn't about budget cuts or property tax reform. It's about time. In my annual convocation address I always make the point that we only have 178 days of student instruction. We need to make them count. Over the course of the school year that clock continues to run, as do my narration of reminders, for example: The 100th day of school (on the day this is being written it is actually the 132nd day)! Or, in my message right after we return from spring break: We are now in the final stretch of the school year, starting our second week of the final quarter of the school year. I do this not to wish away the days with a longing for the warm relaxation of summer break, but to create a sense of urgency. Our principals are focused on teacher pacing. Are they hitting all the benchmarks? Will they finish their curriculum in time? Teachers are focused on just one more chance to move the needle on student achievement for their students.

One could probably argue that time is our most valuable commodity or resource; surpassing even financial effort. After all, we can replenish our revenue. We can find ways to bolster income streams. The one thing we cannot do is turn back time. Once today is gone, it's gone forever. We'll never get it back so it is incumbent on us to use our days and our time wisely. 

Have you ever heard the quote, 'show me your budget and I'll tell you what you value?' I think that is a fair statement. I'll change it a bit though: 'show me your schedule and I'll tell you what you value'. In case you are curious, our daily schedule is 405 minutes of complex collaboration across 3 attendance centers. It is balanced in such a way that changing one component of the schedule at the high school can have a ripple effect across the district, which could ultimately impact when kindergarten has music class. Now, if you were to look at that kindergarten schedule, or any elementary classroom schedule for that matter it would become pretty evident what is valued most in our daily allotment of 405 minutes. Literacy instruction. I'm sure you've heard me say this before. The most important thing that happens in elementary school is that we teach kids how to read. Full stop. Without the ability to read, you cannot function in society. Our schedule reflects that value. The investment we have made in teacher training reflects that value. 

We obviously can't forget about other subjects and content areas. Those too are both important, and required. Math is a close second. Now, it probably wouldn't be fair to rank the remainder of the content because at this point bias begins to enter the picture. Personally, I might rank music higher for example than some other content. That's not really the point. The point is that we have to fit all of those other content areas into our 405 daily minutes. Not just because they are required by the Chapter 12 accreditation standards, but also to ensure that we are turning out well rounded citizen problem solvers. 

There is constant stress on the schedule not just during the annual exercise of negotiation among building principals for time, but on vendors who would like to sell or add just one more program to our already packed daily regimen. They have just the trick, strategy, or program to solve whatever problem ails us. All we need is just a bit of time in the schedule. Or, (and I'm finally getting to the point here today) the legislature adds one more requirement to the schedule. We have to ask, at what cost? And I'm not necessarily talking about the financial implication (of which there almost always undoubtedly is).

So we finally arrive at the point of today's missive. HF2676, aptly named the governor's MAHA (Make America Healthy Again) bill. It has had more amendments added to it that ornaments on a Christmas tree. Now, the bill has some good stuff in it. Even the amendments that aren't so great come from a position of genuine desire to improve the health of our youth. The trouble is Newton's Law of Motion. Let me explain. Perhaps the most problematic of amendments is a new physical education requirement. Under this proposal, students in grades 1-8 would be required to take 30 minutes of PE each day and complete the presidential fitness test. In addition, students in grades K-8 would be required to have 120 minutes of physical activity each week that is not PE (in other words, recess). At the high school, students in grades 9-12 would be required to participate in an extra or co-curricular activity as a condition of graduation. For starters, it would undoubtedly require additional staff. Assuming we have the financial capacity to staff the program might be the easy part.

We have 405 minutes a day. Those minutes are finite. If we add anything to the schedule, anything; it will mean that we have to take those minutes away from somewhere else.

No comments:

Post a Comment