Survey Results on Educators' Opinions: How Should 'Discretionary Time' Be Used?
Key facts
- Survey Results on Educators' Opinions: How Should 'Discretionary Time' Be Used?
- School Voice Project, an NPO, conducted a survey on the proposed 'discretionary time' in Japan's revised curriculum guidelines. 80% of educators support its introduction, with strong preferences for using it for lesson preparation, rest, and professional development.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Tue Jun 16 2026 23:27:47 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
School Voice Project, an NPO, conducted a survey on the proposed 'discretionary time' in Japan's revised curriculum guidelines. 80% of educators support its introduction, with strong preferences for using it for lesson preparation, rest, and professional development.
- Citation
- Survey Results on Educators' Opinions: How Should 'Discretionary Time' Be Used? (Tue Jun 16 2026 23:27:47 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Tue Jun 16 2026 23:27:47 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
School Voice Project, an NPO, conducted a survey on the proposed 'discretionary time' in Japan's revised curriculum guidelines. 80% of educators support its introduction, with strong preferences for using it for lesson preparation, rest, and professional development.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What is 'discretionary time' in schools?
- A: It allows schools to reduce mandatory class hours and use the time for student support, teacher prep, or rest.
- Q: Who participated in the survey?
- A: 56 teachers from elementary to high schools across Japan participated between July and August 2025.
- Q: What is the ideal amount of discretionary time?
- A: 41% chose 'about 20% (1 hour daily or 1 day weekly)' as optimal.
- Q: How do teachers want to use discretionary time?
- A: 92% want it for lesson preparation, followed by student relief, rest, and training.
- Q: Is there support for using it in club activities?
- A: 94% said it's unnecessary, showing very low support for club use.