The School Day and Year
The rules and debate relating to the setting of school hours and term times. Do children benefit from a longer school day or year?
In England, local authority maintained schools must open for at least 380 sessions (190 days) during a school year.
The Government expects that, where not already doing so, state-funded mainstream schools should deliver a school week of at least 32.5 hours by September 2024.
Term dates are determined by school employers. The local authority is the employer for community, voluntary-controlled, community special or maintained nursery schools. For foundation, voluntary-aided and foundation special schools, the employer is the governing body.
The Deregulation Act 2015 provides for the responsibility for determining term dates to pass to school governing bodies at community, voluntary controlled, community special and maintained nursery schools in England. However, this provision is not yet in force.
School session times in local authority maintained schools are determined by the governing body. Academies, including free schools, set their own term dates and school day.
This briefing provides information on the rules relating to the setting of school hours and term times. As schools is a devolved subject, the note focuses on the position in England, but the position in the rest of the UK is also provided.
The paper also provides an introduction to the debate and research on whether longer school days and terms are of benefit to children.