To
better educate students to the levels necessary for success in the
21st century, we must reconsider basic assumptions about
schooling.
One of these is about “when” learning happens.
We must move beyond the time constrictions of current
education systems.
We know that learning does not stop in the early afternoon, during
the summer, or during school vacations. We also know that the type
of learning that occurs during out-of-school time can help
promote student success
and can improve student test scores.
Questions we aim to investigate
through our
Time for
Learning initiative
include:
-
How do
current time constrictions inhibit learning?
-
What
are the institutional and political barriers to expanding when
students learn?
-
What is
the relationship between time available for learning, various
educational engagement strategies, and different levels of
achievement?
-
How can
advances in how we think about “when” learning happens lead us
towards innovation concerning “who” does the teaching and where
“schooling” happens?
Investments made through the Foundation’s
Time for Learning
initiative presently focus on
investigating how
time impacts learning, and the implications of education policy on
the use of time in learning.
Certain programs - previously funded under the Foundation’s Out-of-School
Time Matters! initiative - are now funded under the Time for
Learning initiative.
The Foundation also supports strategies that aim to enhance public
understanding of the need for an expanded notion of when students
are educated.
For information on projected 2008 funding
opportunities in Time for Learning Time and our other initiatives,
visit the
Guidelines page