Starting in the upcoming 2024-25 school year, new requirements are going into effect for elementary school recess in California, including at charter schools. These changes will impact public schools that offer recess in kindergarten through grade 6, unless the school serves grade 6 only as part of a middle and/or high school program. The new requirements are a result of Education Code section 49056, added by Senate Bill 291 (SB 291). The education budget trailer bill signed on June 29, 2024, Senate Bill 153 (SB 153), made further changes.
SB 291 was passed in 2023, adding new recess requirements in Education Code section 49056 that commence in the upcoming 2024-25 school year. Coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, the authors of SB 291 recognized the lingering effects of the pandemic on children’s social-emotional development that play out in the form of prevalent behavioral disruptions in classrooms. The goal of SB 291 is to prioritize and protect unstructured play and peer-to-peer social interactions in schools, in part to help schools address students’ behavioral needs.
The bill analysis for SB 291 also noted research indicating that recess can allow children to test and push their limits, develop physical literacy, and achieve mastery of new skills. While recess time in public schools declined under the No Child Left Behind era, the legislation’s author noted that recess is making a comeback.
SB 291 was aimed at elementary schools, and this was confirmed by the grade level amendments passed in the recent education budget trailer bill, SB 153.
Recess is not mandatory in California public schools at any grade level, although school districts are encouraged to provide daily recess periods for elementary school students. SB 291 did not change this, though the author noted that eight states do require recess. Earlier versions of the legislation would have made recess mandatory in California at certain grade levels, and news articles about those early versions have led to some confusion at schools. The final, approved version of Education Code section 49056 does not require schools to offer recess. Instead, it adds new requirements for elementary schools that do offer recess.
The recess requirements in Education Code section 49056 only apply to public “elementary” schools. An “elementary” school is defined as a public school that serves any of the grades from TK-6. If a school only serves grade 6 as part of a middle and/or high school program, and does not serve younger grades, the school is exempt from the new law so long as it provides P.E. to their 6th grade students.
For schools that maintain grades from TK-6 and also go higher than grade 6—like a TK-12 or TK-8 charter school—the law applies only to recess provided to students in grades TK-6.
Feel free to reach out to our attorneys if you have any questions about whether the new law applies to your school’s grade configurations.
The term “recess” is defined broadly in the new law to include a period of time during the school day, separate and distinct from physical education courses and mealtime, when pupils are given supervised and unstructured time for any of the following:
Schools should read this definition carefully to determine whether the new law affects their programs. Any school that offers these types of break times, whether or not it is called “recess,” must comply with the new law. Some schools may offer recess only at certain grade levels, or only for certain tracks within a grade level, and SB 291 does not require a school to uniformly offer recess across grade levels or across a charter. Rather, SB 291 adds new requirements for any recess time that a school already offers or intends to offer in its elementary program.
Starting in the 2024-25 school year, recess provided by a public school must meet all of the following requirements under new Education Code section 49056:
Remember, the above requirements only apply if a school offers recess as defined under the law. Education Code section 49056 does not require schools to begin offering recess if they did not offer recess before.
Please feel free to reach out to those of us in our Education practice if you have any questions about how these new recess requirements apply to your individual school or program.
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