Top state secondary school moves to a four-and-a-half-day week as ‘it makes pupils happier’

A secondary school in London is cutting its hours (File picture: PA)
A secondary school in London is cutting its hours (File picture: PA)

One of Britain’s top state secondary schools is moving to a four-and-a-half-day week because it will make pupils “happier”.

From September, students at Forest Gate Community School in east London, rated “outstanding” by Ofsted, will leave just after midday every Friday afternoon.

The school will remain open until 5pm for supervised study and talks from guest speakers, though attendance is optional, a letter to parents confirmed this week.

Forest Gate Community School executive headteacher Simon Elliott (Picture: SWNS)
Forest Gate Community School executive headteacher Simon Elliott (Picture: SWNS)

It is claimed the switch will lead to a “happier, more productive school”.

The change comes following a similar experiment at financial services company Perpetual Guardian in New Zealand, where switching to a four-day week led to a 20% boost in productivity and a happier workforce.

The school says staff will be given training to manage the shorter timetable ahead of the introduction of the new policy at the start of the next academic year.

Pay, holiday entitlement and benefits for teachers will remain unchanged, according to the school.

Staff will have the option of finishing early or spending the afternoon improving their teaching at professional development training.

MORE: Cabinet trio warn they will help delay Brexit rather than leave Europe with no deal
MORE: Traveller duo who led 30 caravans on £300,000 brewery wrecking spree are jailed

Forest Gate executive headteacher Simon Elliott says the school will maintain the high academic standards which has seen it ranked in the Top 50 nationally for GCSE results three years in a row.

He said: “When you are a top performing school with consistently among the best GCSE results in the country you cannot rest on your laurels, you must always look at ways in to improve.

“We have been looking into this long before the successful trials in New Zealand and are now convinced it will lead to a happier, more productive school.

“This is something we are undertaking in the knowledge that we have recruited the committed, talented and passionate teachers who will help us make this a success.

“It is about placing confidence in your staff and your management’s capacity to employ the right types of personalities.

The move will make pupils happier, the school says (Picture: Getty)
The move will make pupils happier, the school says (Picture: Getty)

“We are confident that the introduction of a shorter timetable will not impact on our capacity to continue to achieve among the very best results in the country.”

Mr Elliott says the move will also help lift the burden on increasingly overworked staff and improve the quality of teaching.

He said: “This is about moving away from a culture that has developed in the teaching profession of over-burdening staff with excessively long hours.

“It is about teaching them to focus on the most important aspect of their profession which is engaging the hearts and minds of the young people they teach.

“The benefit to the students is that they we will be able to recruit, train and most crucially retain the very best teachers which means better quality of teaching in the classroom.”

—Watch the latest videos from Yahoo UK—