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Zepeda, Sally J.; Mayers, R. Stewart – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2013
In this case, a new superintendent has communicated what he perceives as a needed change affecting students and teachers on several campuses and a seemingly short timeline for making the decision to move off a block schedule. The abrupt nature of the announcement, combined with the circumstances surrounding the superintendent's recent hiring has…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Educational Administration, Administrator Attitudes, Interpersonal Communication
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Zepeda, Sally J.; Mayers, R. Stewart – Review of Educational Research, 2006
In this analysis of 58 empirical studies of high school block scheduling, the authors report findings in and across five groupings. Within groups, data were inconsistent regarding whether teachers' practices changed, but teachers believed that staff development was necessary to teach in a block schedule. Block scheduling appeared to increase…
Descriptors: High Schools, Standardized Tests, Grade Point Average, Block Scheduling
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Zepeda, Sally J. – International Journal of Educational Management, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to record and summarize the tensions and problems experienced by a high school administrative team as they attempted to change supervision alongside instruction in a transition to a new block schedule. Design/methodology/approach: A case study method was used. As a case study, the research is contextual in…
Descriptors: High Schools, Block Scheduling, Elementary Secondary Education, Supervision
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Mayers, R. Stewart; Zepeda, Sally J. – NASSP Bulletin, 2002
Examines challenges that high school department chairpersons faced while changing to a 4 x 4 block schedule. Finds that chairpersons experienced multiple learning curves and increased tensions between departmental and teaching responsibilities, problems exacerbated by reduced release time. Recommends aligning job descriptions with procedures,…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Block Scheduling, Department Heads, High Schools
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Zepeda, Sally J. – Journal of Staff Development, 1999
Block scheduling can help high school principals become staff-development leaders. It gives teachers more time to help individual students and contributes to improved achievement, attendance, and graduation rates. This paper describes the results of research on block scheduling in urban high schools and concludes that block scheduling can support…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Educational Research, Faculty Development, High Schools
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Zepeda, Sally J.; Mayers, R. Stewart – High School Journal, 2001
Across the United States, an ever-increasing number of high schools have reevaluated their use of instructional time and have adopted some form of a block schedule. Block scheduling, an innovation grounded in Trump's Flexible Modular Scheduling Design, reorganizes the school day into extended blocks of time, each approximately 70 to 90 minutes.…
Descriptors: Flexible Scheduling, Block Scheduling, Discipline Problems, Mentors