A Brief Overview:
- A 2024 Washington State law requires daily recess for children in grades K-5 and for 6th graders who go to an elementary school starting in the 2024-2025 school year.
- 30 minutes minimum of daily recess within the school day is required when school days are 5 hours or longer.
- Daily recess MUST be supervised, student-directed and aim to be safe, inclusive and high quality.
- Daily recess should NOT be denied as a form of discipline, or to punish, or to motivate children to finish school-related work.
Full Article:
Rain or shine, “well behaved or not”, daily recess is a very important part of education for every child going to school. And now it is required by the new Washington State Daily Recess Law, RCWA 28A 230.295. When school days are 5 hours or longer, schools are now required to give a minimum of 30 minutes of recess for kids in kindergarten through fifth grade and for sixth graders that go to elementary school. There are more requirements for schools about recess, listed later in this article.
Why is Recess Important?
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), recess helps children in many ways. It increases physical movement, improves memory, attention, and children’s ability to concentrate. Recess also helps children stay focused in classrooms and it even decreases behaviors that are distracting in school. Important social and emotional skills of children, like sharing, improve with recess.
The Washington State Legislature created the Daily Recess Law, which states:
“The legislature recognizes that recess is an essential part of the day for elementary school students. Young students learn through play, and recess supports the mental, physical, and emotional health of students and positively impacts their learning and behavior. Given the state’s youth mental health and physical inactivity crisis, as well as learning loss due to the COVID-19 pandemic, recess is vital to support student well-being and academic success.”
The 2024 law requires:
- Daily recess MUST be supervised, student-directed and aim to be safe, inclusive and high quality.
- Recess that takes place before or after school hours does not count towards following the law; the law’s requirement for daily recess must happen during school hours.
- The time it takes for children to change into “outdoor clothes” should not be part of the 30-minute recess.
- Recess should be a time for play and physical activity. For example, playing organized games would be acceptable, but it would not be okay to allow students to use screens such as phones, tablets or computers.
- Recess should also happen outdoors. However, if indoor recess is needed, schools must encourage physical movement in a part of the school that can be used for physical activity.
- Recess time cannot count toward physical education requirements.
- If a school cannot meet these requirements, the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) can waive (decide not to enforce) this law during the 2024-25 school year.
Finally, the legislature makes clear in the “Intent” section of the law: school employees should not keep any child from daily recess as a form of punishment or as part of a disciplinary plan or to motivate them to finish school-related work.
The law goes into effect at the beginning of the 2024-2025 school year. Some school administrators, teachers, and especially substitute teachers, might not yet know about the law and how it applies to recess. If you learn your child missed recess at school and you are concerned that your child’s school may not know about the Daily Recess Law, here are some possible steps to take:
- You can contact the school principal to find out if staff and educators are ready to use the law. If not, you may suggest they share information about the law with the rest of the school staff, especially substitute teachers.
- If, after allowing time for the school administration to inform teachers (possibly a few weeks) and your child is still sometimes missing daily recess, you may contact your child’s teacher to find out why recess is being missed and tell them what the law says about recess.
- Follow up phone calls made to the school with an email so there is a written record of what was said, including links to the law.
- For ideas on how to communicate with the school in support of your child, here is a link to a video and an article on PAVE’s website called “Quick Start Your Advocacy in Two Steps”
If your child was kept out of recess due to behavior, in addition to reminding the school that denying recess should not be used for discipline, you may want to read PAVE’s article on “What Parents Need to Know when Disability Impacts Behavior and Discipline at School.” This article includes resources and information about student rights, school responsibilities and more related to the key idea that “behavior is a form of communication, and children often try to express their needs and wants more through behavior than words.”
For additional support, you can always reach out to a PAVE staff member by visiting PAVE’s website and completing the online Help Request Form.
More resources: