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New study examines the impact of snow days on student performance

Snow days don鈥檛 subtract from learning
鈥淲ith slack time in the schedule, the time lost to [weather-related] closure can be regained,鈥 says Joshua S. Goodman, assistant professor of public policy at HKS. Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

School administrators may want to be even more aggressive in calling for weather-related closures. A new study conducted by Harvard Kennedy School Assistant Professor Joshua Goodman finds that snow days do not impact student learning. In fact, he finds, keeping schools open during a storm is more detrimental to learning than a closure.

The findings are "consistent with a model in which the central challenge of teaching is coordination of students," Goodman writes. "With slack time in the schedule, the time lost to closure can be regained. Student absences, however, force teachers to expend time getting students on the same page as their classmates."

Goodman, a former , began his study at the behest of the Massachusetts Department of Education, which wanted to know more about the impact of snow days on achievement. He examined reams of data in grades three through 10 from 2003 to 2010. One conclusion鈥攖hat snow days are less detrimental to student performance than other absences鈥攃an be explained by the fact that districts typically plan for weather-related disruptions and tack on extra days in the schedule to compensate. They do not, however, typically schedule make-up days for other student absences.

The lesson for administrators might be considered somewhat counterintuitive. "They need to consider the downside when deciding not to declare a snow day during a storm鈥攖he fact that many kids will miss school regardless, either because of transportation issues or parental discretion. And because those absences typically aren't made up in the school calendar, those kids can fall behind."

Goodman, an assistant professor of public policy, teaches empirical methods and the economics of education. His research interests include labor and public economics, with a particular focus on education policy.

More information: Read the paper here:

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