Boosting Student Engagement Through a Schoolwide Lunch Hour

Edutopia
EdutopiaMar 25, 2026

Why It Matters

By turning lunch into a flexible engagement hub, Spring Mills demonstrates how modest schedule changes can lift attendance, deepen student belonging, and boost academic results—insights other schools can adopt to improve outcomes.

Key Takeaways

  • One‑hour lunch period offers flexible academic and social activities.
  • Attendance rose dramatically after introducing Cardinals Connect program.
  • Student‑run clubs expanded from few to over thirty offerings.
  • Improved test scores and IXL results accompany higher engagement.
  • Students report increased energy and faster pace after lunch hour.

Summary

Spring Mills High School in West Virginia launched Cardinals Connect, a school‑wide, one‑hour lunch period designed to give students choice over activities, tutoring, downtime, or club participation. The initiative aims to transform the school climate, making attendance a benefit rather than a chore.

Since its rollout, the program has driven measurable gains: chronic absenteeism dropped sharply, attendance surged to the county’s best, and academic metrics—including PSAT, SAT, and IXL scores—showed notable improvement. By opening gyms, libraries, and outdoor spaces, the school enabled over 30 clubs, ranging from sports to food drives, fostering peer connections and self‑management skills.

Administrators highlighted the cultural shift. Mark Salfia described managing “organized chaos” among 1,600 teens, while Carrie Marcum noted the need for a climate that encourages presence. Students echoed the impact, saying the hour boosts energy, speeds up the rest of the day, and provides a venue to forge new friendships.

The success suggests that reallocating lunch time for structured, student‑driven engagement can be a replicable strategy for districts seeking higher attendance and academic outcomes, reinforcing the link between school culture and performance.

Original Description

For this high school in West Virginia, building time for clubs and tutoring into the school day means happier, higher-achieving students.
Founded in 2013, Spring Mills High School in Martinsburg, West Virginia, is the newest school in the state. The administrators and teachers faced a familiar challenge: How do you inspire students to come to school regularly, especially when there’s no established school culture or traditions? When chronic absenteeism reached 33% in 2023, school leadership knew they needed to act—and the biggest change that Spring Mills made was to alter the bell schedule to allow for a single, schoolwide lunch hour, called Cardinals Connect.
Join the Edutopia community today to get articles, videos, and more delivered via email every Wednesday—all tailored to you and your unique role: https://edut.to/3wEVHUh
Follow us here:
Official Website: https://edutopia.org 
#studentwellness #schoolculture
© 2026 George Lucas Educational Foundation

Comments

Want to join the conversation?

Loading comments...