Simple answer is no......The more joints you have in a pour, the weaker the finished product. Large walls are done via continuous pours, in approximately 6-10" lifts, to allow proper entrained air removal and form filling and to reduce the chance of a blowout.
For quick estimating, a yard of concrete will do about 70 square feet of 4" thick flat slab, which would require 45 bags of quickcrete. A pony wall of 8" thickness, 24" high and 120" long, is about a half yard of volume. Quickcrete has a set time of an hour or less, and once it starts setting, structural complete joints are near impossible.
A good crew can come in, form, lay rebar, pour and finish the complete foundation and the walls in just a couple of days.