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Rebecca Turner; Debby R. E. Cotton; Emily Danvers; David Morrison; Pauline E. Kneale – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2024
This study examined how academic staff responded to a cross-institutional change initiative to integrate immersive scheduling into the first-year undergraduate curriculum. Immersive scheduling, also referred to as block or compressed delivery, sought to create a supportive first-year experience, to ease students' transition to university. Adopting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Block Scheduling
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Thomas Roche; Erica Wilson; Elizabeth Goode – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2024
Universities across the globe are considering how to effect meaningful change in their higher education (HE) delivery in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic and shifting student learning preferences. This paper reports on a descriptive case- study of whole-of-institution curriculum reform at one regional Australian university, where more traditional…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Educational Change, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Brøgger, Katja – European Educational Research Journal, 2019
Through an ethnographic exploration of policy documents, this paper aims to expose how outcome-oriented education standards gained international hegemonic status in the Bologna Process. Taking inspiration in the concept of hegemony and by connecting the invisible power of hegemony to soft governance, the paper shows how the outcome-based modular…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Power Structure, Educational Cooperation, International Cooperation
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Eddy Spicer, David H. – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2013
This article interrogates the "soft power" of teacher teamwork by probing the ways in which authority conditions the appropriation of institutional motives through collective meaning making. The study analyzes the interaction of a teacher-leader and a science teacher team across two settings of professional development organized to…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Teacher Collaboration, Interaction, Science Teachers
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Hess, Caryl; Wronkovich, Michael; Robinson, James – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
A study of 270 sophomores taught in either a block scheduling or traditional scheduling format showed significant results for English and biology. Block schedules significantly predicted pretest to posttest differences in Educational Testing Service subject scores over and above those of students following traditional schedules. (Contains 16…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Curriculum Development, Grade 10, High Schools
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Meister, Denise; Nolan, Jim, Jr. – Teachers College Record, 2001
Examined how high school teachers made meaning of a change process involving teamwork, interdisciplinary teaching, and block scheduling. Document analysis, observation, and interview data indicated that uncertainty and doubt were the pervading themes and had a critical effect on the teaching team's ability to move to interdisciplinary teaching.…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Curriculum Development, Interdisciplinary Approach, Secondary Education
Jordan, Miriam M.; Padilla, Michael – 1999
This research explores the structure of possible science education reform that can be compatible with structural change in high schools. Financial pressures, increased or decreased enrollment, state mandated changes, block scheduling, and assignments of students to age-appropriate grades are all examples of structural changes. Block scheduling is…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Concept Formation, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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Hackmann, Donald G.; Shelley, Mack C., II – Planning and Changing, 2002
Provides a brief overview of historical trends in classroom instructional practices and explains the emergence of constructivist theory. Describes two instructional practices at the secondary level: curriculum integration and teaming. Reports findings of a case study examining one high school faculty's teaching practices while engaged in…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Case Studies, Constructivism (Learning), Curriculum Development
Southern Regional Education Board, Atlanta, GA. – 1998
Randolph County Vocational Technical Center, Elkins, West Virginia, received a grant in 1997 for a project that was part of the High Schools That Work (HSTW) initiative to improve academic skills of career-bound students. The superintendent and faculty knew that improving achievement meant reaching out to the three home high schools to bring them…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Assignments, Block Scheduling